With mobile phones, such as the
Sony
Ericsson W810i, now offering decent digital photo image quality plus video
games and MP3 playback, sales of low-end digital compacts cameras have suffered.
Fujifilm
has decided if you can’t beat 'em, join 'em and included gaming on its otherwise
sophisticated FinePix V10 snapshot. However, the four provided – a numbers
puzzle, a maze, a shoot-‘em-up and a ‘blockbuster’ style affair – soon get
boring.
While undoubtedly a gimmick, this has at least resulted in a large,
high-resolution 3in
screen for
the main business of taking and reviewing photos.
A row of essential controls – such as the menu, review and delete buttons –
have been squeezed in just below, the left and right scroll buttons doubling up
as a rudimentary joystick.
About a centimetre wider than a credit card, with a rechargeable lithium
battery inserted, the
V10
feels sturdy in the palm and its overall build quality is high.
However, with nothing substantial to grip when taking pictures, the screen
can quickly become smudged with fingerprints.
Maintaining a cool, minimal look, a brushed grey metal plate hides a 3.4x
zoom lens when not in use, which is cleverly controlled via a lever that
surrounds the shutter button.
Upon powering up this same zoom leaps into action, extending fully and
readying the
FinePix
V10 for a shot in around a second.
A speedy internal processor also ensures there’s little noticeable shutter
delay – the wait between pressing the button and the camera taking a shot –
while the FinePix V10 takes just a couple of seconds to store images taken at
maximum resolution onto the 16Mb xD-Picture Card supplied.
Although the FinePix V10 boasts ‘just’ five megapixels, you would be hard
pressed to notice a dip in quality or sharpness against the increasingly
standard six, and colours are pleasingly natural.
In spite of the fact that controls have been pared down to allow the larger
LCD, the FinePix V10 isn’t a total triumph of style over substance.
Grown up features such as low light photography up to ISO1600, which the V10
shares with its bigger brothers, the FinePix F11 and
F30, haven’t been
forgotten.
Come the summer and bright sunshine there’s also a low setting of ISO64 so
images won't look bleached in the sun.
Add to this TV quality video clips with sound, however, and you have an
inexpensive and stylish compact camera that ticks most boxes.
Also consider
Canon
PowerShot A540
Verdict: An identically priced budget camera that may not look as swish but
packs in 6 megapixels
Rating: 4/5
Price: £249
Reader comments