FujiFilm DX-10
The 0.8 megapixel resolution is enough to produce good-looking prints up to about 5x7 inches, and color and general image quality is quite good, certainly relative to other cameras in its price range. It's basic image size is 1024x768 pixels, with a smaller 640x480 picture size available as a menu option. Likewise, there are two image-compression options, depending on how you want to trade-off image quality for storage capacity. The lens is a fixed-focus, fixed focal-length design, with a focal length corresponding to a 40mm lens on a 35mm camera, a slight wide-angle. A 1.6x "digital zoom" crops down to the central 640x480 pixels of the sensor array, producing an image of that size, but taking in a correspondingly smaller portion of the overall subject.
Normal focusing is from 28 inches (0.7 m) to infinity, while a macro option allows focusing as close as 3.9 inches (0.1 m). Lens apertures switch between f/4 and f/8, in response to the available lighting, and shutter speed runs from 1/4 second to 1/5,000 of a second. Equivalent ISO "film speed" is 150, and the camera captures usable images down to about EV10. Five different white-balance settings are provided to handle different lighting conditions, and the exposure system is unusually flexible, allowing variation of both ambient and flash exposures.
Both optical and LCD viewfinders are provided, the LCD being the more accurate of the two, with the optical finder providing a nominally accurate view, but one that's subject to some interpretation (see the main review, below). The built-in 4-mode flash has a range of up to 9.8 feet (3 meters), and also has the added capability for "slow-sync" operation. The unit ships with a 4 Meg SmartMedia memory card, connects to the computer via an RS-232 serial interface, and has a video output as well.
Front of Camera
Back of Camera
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1