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Friday, February 25, 2011

Casio Exilim EX-H20G: A Fun Pocket Megazoom for Travelers

Casio Exilim EX-H20G Review, by Tim Moynihan
he 14-megapixel, 10X-optical-zoom Casio Exilim EX-H20G ($300 as of February 13, 2011) is a great little travel companion, thanks to well-implemented in-camera mapping and GPS features that make it a near-perfect pocket megazoom camera for your vacation.
Although it performs well overall, a few key features are missing: It lacks manual controls, it omits a burst-shooting mode, and it doesn't shoot the sharpest photos in low light. All in all, however, the EX-H20G offers a lot more to like than to complain about, and its battery life and its in-camera GPS features are among the best we've seen to date.

Hardware and Design

At 1.13 inches deep, 4.0 inches wide, and 2.7 inches high, the Exilim EX-H20G is a bit bigger than your average pocket camera. It's still small enough for roomier coat pockets or cargo pants, though.
The camera has a 14-megapixel CCD sensor (sized at 1/2.3 inches) behind its 10X-optical-zoom lens, which reaches from a very wide-angle 24mm to a telephoto end of 240mm. An additional 5X digital zoom is available beyond the telephoto end of the zoom range, but image quality gets downright rough once you dip into the digital zoom.
Casio Exilim EX-H20G pocket megazoom cameraMaximum aperture settings range from F3.2 at the wide-angle end to F5.7 at the telephoto end, but the lack of manual controls and an aperture-priority mode means that you don't have direct control over its width. Shutter speeds are variable only through use of the camera's extensive array of scene modes; scene options such as "Soft Flowing Water" and "Fireworks," for instance, use slower shutter speeds, while modes such as "Pets" and "Sports" use faster ones.
Like most point-and-shoot cameras these days, the EX-H20G has no optical viewfinder. A 3-inch LCD on the back of the camera serves as your only viewfinder, but it generally does a good job of staying visible in most lighting conditions.
Due to the absence of manual options, the camera's controls are simple and straightforward. On the back of the camera is a dedicated video record button, a dedicated Auto mode button, a playback button, a Menu button, and a 'BS' button that takes you to the camera's Best Shot menu of scene-mode offerings. A round directional control pad surrounds a selector button for navigating in-camera menus.
On the top of the camera are the on/off button, the shutter release surrounded by a zoom control, and the camera's slightly protruding GPS antenna. Two more buttons on the top provide quick access to the camera's mapping and GPS features: One button, which has a graphic of a Fisher-Price-like person, centers the camera's map on your current location. The other button, which has a globe-like icon, displays the shots you've taken on a map interface (as well as the route you've traveled with your camera in hand).
Source: pcworld. Read more...
 

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