|
This doesn't help when
the rest of the world with mini usb cables all around.
This also the same port for charging the battery, with the other battery
charging cable.
So if the camera suddenly needs a charge (and there is no warning or
sluggish operation) you can't use any charger. You also can't watch movies
on the tv without using the battery power.
That said, I do like the camera but the cable issue has been too hard to
swallow and it got me good one time without notice.
The photos come out nice and there are lots of features that I am sure
work somehow.
I am going for the Kodak v530, no separate USB port but a separate charge
port, bigger screen, zoom active in video and a fast photo response time -
even with the flash.
I was lucky enough to get my Samsung at Co-st-co and they have the most
unbelievable return policy, any time length with a receipt.
________________________________________________________________
   
Packed full of goodies, November 13, 2005
Reviewer: Trooper John "Trooper John"
I've been a Nikon snob for years. I owned my own photo studio for 10
years. I'm now a State Trooper who shoots lots of auto crash scenes. I own
a small Nikon digital camera that is great but pricy. A friend has a lower
end Samsung digital camera. We were out in the mountains shooting wild
flowers this fall and after going home we downloaded the images to my
computer. I found not only her Samsung photos were beautiful but my Nikon
images were no better. Had to have one immediately!
My Samsung Digimax U-CA5 lives up to everything they say it is. When I
looked at the initial ratings on the page it didn't sound good but when
reading the reviews, there didn't seem to be a problem with the camera.
Trust me, this camera is great, from general snapshots to closeup and
adding audio clips to the photos. The video clips look as good as some
higher end video camera's on the TV and the sound, although mono is clear
and precise. It's a $200.00+- camera that acts like a high end unit. I
really like the in-camera video editing. The software that comes with it
works flawlessly.
Now my Nikon is only a backup camera........
Enjoy, Trooper John
________________________________________________________________
   
Lightweight and portable, September 15, 2005
Reviewer: Carlos 'Catel' "an IT veteran"
Finally I don't have to carry a bag with the camera, I just carry it in my
waist. The resolution is ok, and the mpeg4 video recorded looks like my
8mm camera's.
I didn't want my camera to be too noticed, so I selected to go with the
blue one instead of this red version. There's a grey one as well.
I also purchased a Sandisk 1GB SD which gives this camera the ability to
store 382 photos in full resolution, one hour and 8 minutes of video
(68:00), or 25 hours 30 minutes of audio. (!)
________________________________________________________________
   
A journalist's best friend. Photos + videocam + voice recorder
replacement. Love it., September 5, 2005
Reviewer: FERNANDO CASSIA "-Writer and Computer Geek-"
I purchased this camera over a month ago. I'm like a kid with a new toy.
But first things first, the advantages:
1) It's a small as a cellular phone
2) The LCD is bright, even when used outside in a sunny day
3) A carrying pouch with velcro top -attached securely to your belt with
no chance of it being removed/stolen since it's pass-through- makes it
pass as just a cell phone. Nobody will look at you if you're carrying this
camera around in your daily life.
4) It's LIGHT and SMALL.
5) Image quality is very good, at 2594x1944.
6) VIDEO RECORDING is an acceptable 640x480 (480 vertical lines is about
the same resolution as ntsc video = S-VHS quality!) is NOT LIMITED by
anything, just by the size of the SD memory inserted. In other words, with
a 512MB SD memory (around 37 bucks here in Amazon.com, look for the
Kingston brand), you can record over 30 minutes of video at 30 frames per
second. With a 1GB SD (around 66 bucks, Kingston brand), over an hour of
video!.
I challenge anyone to transfer back any MPEG4 videos @ 30 fps, 640x480
created with this camera to VHS video and make someone discover what kind
of camera it was recorded on. The majority will think it was recorded with
a camcorder or handycam!. It's that good. Google for "The Inquirer UK" and
"Samsung mpeg4" to get the URL of my full review, which includes some
sample videos and full-resolution images.
The icing on the cake is the ability of this camera to function, at the
flick of a switch (the lens retract and close as in the off position) as a
DIGITAL VOICE RECORDER. So you can record classes at school, meetings,
speeches, conferences.... records over 12 hours on a 512MB SD memory
(8-bit, mono, wav format).
If your printer supports it, it can even print photos directly from the
camera to the USB printer just by plugging a USB cable between the two!.
Did I mention that besides WinXP SP2 I also succesfully tested it on Linux
(Java Desktop System R2 from Sun), and the manual claims full
compatibility with Mac OS-X as well?.
It uses the open-source "XVID" mpeg4 video compression algorithm, so
cross-platform compatibility of the videos recorded with it is assured
(unlike what happens with Quicktime, Windows Media, and other closed
technologies).
What else could I ask for?. Well, one thing, I can't wait to buy the
keychain-style infrared remote for self-shots and group photos. It's an
optional accesory like a TV set-top "docking cradle".
Back to Samsung Digimax U-CA5
5MP |