|
[../LMNU.html]
|
Casio Exilim Card
EX-S10
 |
 |
 |
|
10.10 Megapixels
3X zoom lens
2.7 inch LCD |
|
It has
extremely Lightweight, absolutely thin, and impeccably designed, the
Casio Exilim EX-S10 is a wonderful looking camera that is very simple to
handle, to boot. By a footstep comparable to a cigarette casing, it's
small sufficient to slip into a shirt pocket, and by a reflective
however tastefully colored exterior; it's absolutely classy enough to
pull out at a party and not be that dweeb by the camera.
Purchase Camera By:
The face features most tasteful, circular accents just about the lens
itself, and the back is devoted approximately entirely to the 2.7-inch
LCD viewfinder. To its right is the camera's sparse nevertheless
effective control, consist of four shortcut buttons, a four-mode
controller, and a record-button dedicated to video. On top of camera the
power switch is understandably tiny, given the camera's thumbnail
thickness, and next to that is the shutter release. To our pleasure and
astonish, Casio has wrapped the zoom control just about the shutter,
which we feel is significantly handier than a two-way button. Our merely
complaint is that Casio persists in labeling their scene-mode button
BS' (pro very "Best Shot"), other than it's at most a wisp of a flaw
that hardly detracts as of the EX-S10's svelte styling.
Features
In short a word, the merely thing the EX-S10 lacks is optical
image-stabilization. Still that is somewhat ameliorated through Casio's
array of very highly developed automatic-shutters. For instance, under
the detect blur' setting, the camera delays the shutter until both the
subject matter and the camera itself have stopped moving. In our testing
this did circumvent camera-shudder to an excellent point, although it
still can't be said to replace good stabilisation, while the
auto-shutter often resulted in nearly four to five second pauses before
snapping the picture.
Otherwise the EX-S10 offers basically everything to be expected in a
point-and-shoot: the abovementioned auto-shutter by blur, panning, and
very smile detection, Casio's intelligent face-detection that canister
even pick-out previously photographed faces, soft and red-eye decrease
flashes, and constant burst-modes by flash support. Better yet, the
special camera packs image- quality features not predictable of a
point-and-shoot, namely a 10-megapixel sensor and support pro ISO
ranging from ISO-50 to 1600.
The EX-S10
furthermore has above-average video recording, including native support
pro 16:9 aspect-ratios and resolutions up to 848x480, both of which
handily surpass the meager necessities of YouTube uploads. Video is
recorded to an H.264 stream, auditory to a 44.1 kHz AAC stream at ~ 90
kbps and both are mixed into a MOV file, so the potential pro quality is
quite high.
More on Casio
|