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Olympus Camedia C-360 Zoom
(Also known as the Olympus Camedia D-575 Zoom)
Review Date: July 6th 2004
Features
The Olympus Camedia C-360 Zoom is positioned in the middle
of the range in what Olympus call their "Easy" category.
It has a 3.2-megapixel CCD and a 3x optical zoom that is equivalent
to a 35–105mm lens on a 35mm format camera. The lens
has a respectable aperture range of f3.1 at the widest setting
of 35mm and f5.2 at the longest setting of 114mm. The shutter
speed range is 1– 1/1000th second.
The C-360 Zoom uses the xD-Picture Card format, which is tiny
and allows the camera to be physically small (108 (W) x 57.5
(H) 36.5 (D) mm to be precise) and weigh very little (165g
without battery and memory card). The C-360ZOOM is compatible
with the Olympus Software Development Kit (SDK). This lets
you control all the camera's functions from a computer, such
as zoom, exposure and camera release.
The C-360 Zoom doesn't have conventional exposure modes like
aperture-priority, shutter-speed priority or manual. Instead
it offers a range of scene modes, starting with Program AE
(basically a full-auto mode), then Portrait, Self-portrait,
Night Scene, Landscape and Landscape with Portrait. Exposure
compensation is available at ±2 EV in 1/2 EV steps.
The C-360 Zoom has a panoramic mode, 2 in 1 mode, sepia mode,
black and white mode and it allows you to record short movies
with sound in the QuickTime Motion JPEG format. There is one
movie mode, HQ (320 x 240 pixels), which allows you to record
up to the capacity of the memory card (57 seconds with a 16Mb
card).
The C-360 Zoom uses the Digital ESP metering system, which
takes an average reading from the scene, and it also has a
Spot metering option, something that is often missing from
much more expensive digital cameras. ISO speeds range from
80 to 400, but unfortunately you can't actually choose the
speed - instead the camera selects the most suitable setting
for you. White Balance can be set automatically by the camera,
or you can choose from sunlight, overcast, tungsten light
and fluorescent light presets.
The focusing system used is TTL system iESP autofocus with
contrast detection. The working range in Standard mode is
0.5m – infinity. There are also two different macro
modes available - Macro mode allows you to focus as close
as 0.2m, and Super macro mode as close as 7cm. The built-in
flash has a guide number of 7.6 and offers a range of different
modes; Auto (automatic activation in low and backlight), Red-eye
Reduction, Fill-in (forced activation) and Off (no flash).
Images are recorded as JPEGs in a range of different quality
and size settings (2,048 x 1,536, 1,600 x 1200 and 640 x 480);
there are no TIFF or RAW formats. To compose your images,
you can either use the small optical viewfinder or the 1.8
inch colour TFT LCD monitor with 85,000 pixels. The C-360 Zoom
features Olympus' new TruePic Turbo technology, which delivers
more image clarity, contrast and brilliant colour and also
increases the camera's processing speed by up to 30%.
The C-360 Zoom is powered by either a proprietary rechargeable
lithium-ion battery, which takes a couple of hours to fully
charge, or 2 x AA Ni-MH/Alkaline rechargeable batteries. PictBridge
support allows direct printing with compatible printers, and
there is a USB 2.0 Full Speed Auto Connect interface to connect
the camera to your computer.
Finally, the box kit includes a camera strap, 16MB xD-Picture
Card, USB cable, AV cable, 2 AA Alkaline batteries, instruction
manual and the CAMEDIA Master 4.2 software package. You will
need to invest in a few additional items: more xD-Picture
Cards to store your images on, a few sets of AA Ni-MH batteries
to power the camera, and maybe a camera case. The standard
box kit is one area in which Olympus has chosen to save some
money.
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