Ricoh Caplio GX88
Review Date: October 13th 2005
Conclusion

(out of 5 stars)
The Ricoh Caplio GX8 is a frustrating camera. It's one of the most usable, intuitive and well-designed digital cameras that I have ever reviewed. At the same time, however, the images that it produces are some of the worst that I have ever seen. Large amounts of chromatic aberrations
are present in many varied situations, including those where you wouldn't expect to see it, and noise is very apparent at ISO
200 and faster. If only Ricoh could have improved the image
quality, they would have had a winner on their hands, but
sadly the introduction of that 8 megapixel sensor has just made the image quality worse than it was on the previous 5 megapixel GX camera (which wasn't great anyway).
The 28-85mm wide lens does make the Ricoh Caplio GX8 stand out from the crowd of
digital cameras that only go as wide as 35mm, and the sheer
speed of its operation means that the Caplio GX8 will never
leave you waiting around. Control over aperture and shutter speed
has been added by Ricoh, but unfortunately it doesn't allow
as much control as many photographers will demand. I think
this is something of a missed opportunity by Ricoh (again) - separate
Aperture-priority, Shutter-priority and Manual modes would
have really added to the camera's appeal.
Ultimately the Ricoh Caplio GX8 just goes to proves that increasing the number of megapixels without increasing the sensor size inevitably leads to poorer image quality. It may be a great camera on paper, but in reality the photographs that it produces simply let it down.
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