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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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DCR-PC101: Sony's combo camera October 02, 2002 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/coolgear/cameras/soa/DCR-PC101-Sony-s-combo-camera/0,139023377,120268695,00.htm
The compact point-and-shoot DCR-PC101 speaks to both the videographer and the photographer. Sony's point-and-shoot PC101 combines an ultracompact one- chip MiniDV video camera with a one-megapixel digital still camera in a package that alternately pleases and frustrates. Outfitted with a 10X Carl Zeiss zoom lens, a 2.5-inch touch-screen LCD, and a Memory Stick slot for saving still shots and MPEG video, the 567 gram (fully loaded) PC101 ranks as one of the most portable and versatile MiniDV cameras available, despite its flaws. It isn't as tiny as Sony's MicroMV cameras, but those models capture MPEG-2 video that can't match the PC101's DV video when it comes to video-editing flexibility. Design At 2.5 inches, the PC101's flip-out touch screen is large for the camcorder's small body, although it falls in the average size range for camcorder LCDs. In this case, big is good: the screen is the sole interface for accessing most of the camera's controls, including exposure compensation. (You can't access them via the color viewfinder.) Since the LCD is nearly unusable in strong sunlight, you'll have to head for the shadows if you need to adjust the controls--and you will if you shoot a lot of stills. Should your screen lose its tactile bearings, Sony includes a special cleaning cloth and directions for recalibrating the screen. You navigate playback and effects menus via the touch screen. You'll find some novel features; for instance, you can choose your focal point or spot metering target simply by touching it on the LCD image. But after our initial oohs and ahs, we never again used these features. They take too much time to get at, especially for a camera that's all about taking advantage of the moment. Among our other gripes, the delete function for Memory Stick stills is incomprehensible. We had to refer to the manual several times. And as for mechanical controls, there are precious few, among them a focus ring and a zoom control. Another ding: you must hold the dangling lens cap yourself while you're shooting. Features You have a choice of four programmed shooting modes. You can optimize exposure settings and shutter speeds for spotlit subjects, for portraits with backgrounds you want in soft focus, for action, and for extremely bright scenes that can leave faces excessively dark. Tweak the modes to shoot bright subjects, such as sunsets, which usually render backgrounds indistinct, as well as for distant shots through windows. On the supplied 8MB Memory Stick, the camera stores still shots as JPEG files and video as MPEG files. If you want to use the PC101 to play back your footage, you can mix stills and video and zoom in on your stills. Performance The top-mounted omnidirectional microphone accepts sound from both in front of and behind the camera. Although the microphone does a workmanlike job of picking up a wide range of decibel levels, we'd prefer one mounted on the camera's front for more rearward sound rejection. Image quality However, even that megapixel of sensor power can't keep trouble away. Some footage was a bit too contrasty, and stills appeared to have about one stop less light available as the same shot recorded as video. Nevertheless, the chance to get great low-resolution stills anytime is surprisingly hard to resist. We snapped and snapped. Sony has entirely solved the picture noise problem that plagued its earlier efforts at low-light videography. But although the PC101's single CCD produces clear images, it's not terribly sensitive in normal shooting mode; its minimum illumination rating of seven lux killed our attempt at capturing a moonlit tropical sea. The camera's Night Shot mode is rated at zero lux--no light at all--but only for objects close enough to be illuminated by the camera's built-in infrared light. Night Shot doesn't record color, so there's also a special slow-shutter mode for low light levels that retains color at some cost in image fluidity: a slow shutter means images that move in stutter steps.
Sony DCR-PC101
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