|
Editors' Rating:
not rated
| • Value for money |
- |
| • Ease of Use |
- |
| • Performance |
- |
| • Image Quality |
- |
|
Average User Rating:
not rated
(0 vote)
| •
Value for money |
- |
| • Ease of Use |
- |
| • Performance |
- |
| • Image Quality |
- |
|
Approximate Price:
$339
Where to Buy ?
|
PROS
•
•
•
|
CONS
•
•
•
|
|
Includes: FujiFilm FinePix S5000 Digital Camera,
16MB xD-Picture Card, 4 AA type alkaline batteries, Shoulder strap, Lens cap, AV cable, USB cable, CD-ROM contain USB driver, FinePix
Viewer, ImageMixer VCD for FinePix. |
The FinePix S5000 looks like an SLR, weighs the same as a compact
camera and handles like a dream. It represents an affordable, compact,
lightweight three megapixel (SuperCCD pixels) digital camera with a ten
times optical zoom lens and an SLR-like appearance. Although the
camera has a certain amount of manual control it doesn't seem to be aimed
directly at the serious prosumer, it's lacking some features (such as
manual white balance) which those users will only get from a camera like
the S602 Zoom. That said this is a camera which could be taken on holiday
as a 'full range' camera, used for casual sports events and more.
FinePix
S5000 Major Features:
| • |
10x
Zoom Digital Camera featuring 3.1 effective megapixels. |
| • |
3.1
effective megapixels for 2,816 x 2,120-pixel
images. |
| • |
Fujifilm's New
4rd generation
Super CCD HR System featuring Pixel Data Coupling Technology for Increased sharpness and color with less electronic noise, and new Pixel-Mixing Technology for improved video capture with greater detail. |
| • |
1.5-inch
low temperature polysilicon TFT LCD monitor. |
| • |
Fujinon
10X Zoom lens,
f/2.8-f/9.0; 10 steps.
(equivalent
to a 37-370mm lens on a 35mm camera). |
| • |
Digital
zoom up to 2.2x magnification. |
| • |
Ultra high resolution electronic viewfinder with diopter compensation. |
| • |
Four programmed exposure modes: Auto, Aperture Priority, Shutter
Priority, Manual, and Program shift. |
| • |
TTL-64 zone multi, spot and average metering options. |
| • |
Auto and manual focus options, with adjustable AF area. |
| • |
Special shooting modes: Programmed auto, aperture-priority
AE, shutter-priority AE and manual EV control, scene modes, continuous
auto focusing, auto bracketing, photo mode control —
ISO/resolution/color. |
| • |
White balance: Automatic, Manual (Fine, Shade, Fluorescent light
(Daylight), Fluorescent light (Warm White), Fluorescent light (Cool
White), Incandescent light). |
| • |
Adjustable ISO setting with 160, 200, 400, and 800
equivalents. (800 only at 1,280 x 960 pixels) |
| • |
Shutter
speed settings from 1/2000 to 2 seconds. |
| • |
Built-in
flash with six modes (Auto, Red-eye Reduction, Forced Flash,
Suppressed Flash, Slow Syncro, Slow Syncro with Red-eye Reduction). |
| • |
10-second
Self-Timer. |
| • |
Movie
(with sound) and Audio recording modes. |
| • |
Playback zoom (up to 18x, scrollable). |
| • |
Powered by xD-Picture Cards. |
| • |
Power via four AA-type batteries or optional AC
adapter (four AA alkaline batteries included). |
| • |
USB
cable for high-speed connection to a computer. |
| • |
DPOF
(Digital Print Order Format) compatibility. |
| |
Full Specification |
The Lowest Price is not always best !
When you buy a digital camera, the basic package almost always includes
extras such as a battery charger, lens cap, batteries, flash memory card, and software.
One of the more disreputable practices a dealer can engage in is called unbundling. These
dealers remove items from the package that are normally included in the price and
price them separately.
When purchasing
a camera you have three components of the price to consider - the camera price, postage and
handling, and taxes. Many dealers lower the price to make the camera more attractive, then
increase the postage and handling to boost their profits.
Hesitate before
accepting extended warranties. Every knowledgeable consumer expert says it's better to
gamble. Most of a company's profit is in the sale of these warranties so they press, and
press hard. Your job is to resist, and resist hard. The only thing to keep in mind is that
digital cameras can be horribly expensive to repair. If you want peace of mind, you may
want the warranty, even though it's probably overpriced. The cost of a repair can
approach, or even exceed, the original purchase price.
When you buy a
camera from a reputable dealer, you expect to be able to return it if you aren't
satisfied. Some dealers try to discourage this by requiring a restocking fee for returned
merchandise. This is always explained as a way to recover their costs of checking the
merchandise and restoring the packaging you may have opened.
Many dealers is
truly a false, deceptive and a total crook. Bait and switch tactics used. Does not sell
new merchandise and will ship used or refurbished goods without notifying customer. They then
try to charge a restock fee on top of their exobitant shipping fees to make a profit where
they could not on their goods. A try case of buyer beware.
|
Store Profiles and Customer Evaluation of top rated
reliable merchants:
(Merchant Compare feature, powered by BizRate, lets you compare the performance of popular online merchants based on actual customer feedback.)
Approximate Price:
$339
Where To Buy
Fuji FinePix S5000 Digital Camera:
|