You usually have to choose between two types of digital cameras: slim-line beauties with large LCD screens or bulky enthusiast cameras capable of heavy lifting. The Casio Exilim EX-Z750 scores a coup by integrating these two schools of camera design--or rather, squeezing the benefits of the latter into the tight-fitting pants of the former. The 7.2-megapixel Z750 is the impressive spiritual successor to the handsome Exilim EX-Z55, a camera with admirable looks but disappointing image quality and a dearth of manual features. It offers the same 2.5-inch screen and trendy sub-inch-thick jeans-pocketable design as its forbearer but brings a host of new features to the table, as well as solid performance and very good image quality. Though it still lacks some of the advanced manual features found in Casio's larger but similarly priced EX-P700, we're willing to give it the benefit of the doubt. If you're a photographer who craves style but also has a creative itch, the EX-Z750 is one of the few cameras we've seen that adequately addresses both.
Design
The ultracompact Casio Exilim EX-Z750's brushed-metal
frame looks great without scratching easily, and its beveled edges won't dig
into your hands at the corners. The rear of the 5.6-ounce camera is dominated by
the gorgeous 2.5-inch LCD screen, which at its brightest can be easily seen in
daylight but can also be dimmed to save battery life. A screen this large is
useful for distracting from the Z750's woeful optical viewfinder, which is so
small and ineffective as to be largely useless.

This model retains the very appealing Exilim menu system, with a few new twists that make operations a bit more efficient. Recording options, such as autofocus area and digital zoom, now live on a different tab than image size and white balance, so you can get to the functions you need more quickly. The drive mode and the EX button, which calls up frequently used settings, are squeezed onto the left edge of the camera's rear, just next to the LCD screen. One gripe we do have with the Z750's design is its dependence on the bundled dock for charging the battery and uploading images to your computer. Though we're hesitant to complain when the end result is a camera this sleek-looking, the dock creates a bit more of a travel burden when you want to take your photos on the road.
Features
The Casio Exilim EX-Z750's feature set may be its greatest trump card; as we've mentioned, it packs shutter- and aperture-priority modes into a camera-body size unused to such manual delights. The camera's lens moves quickly through its 3X zoom range, which corresponds to focal lengths of 38mm to 114mm (35mm equivalent). The wide-angle focal length of 38mm is a bit narrow for anyone hoping to take lots of indoor shots, but it's not entirely unexpected in a camera this slim. Among the Z750's nearly 30 preset Best Shot modes is an antishake option that we haven't seen in prior Exilims; in practice, this takes a bit of the edge off an unsteady hand but doesn't offer nearly the level of stabilization you'd get from an optical antishake mechanism such as Panasonic's. Plus, when you're using scene presets, you don't have access to the camera's manual features, and antishake technology is most useful at slow shutter speeds. We like the Multi Continuous shooting mode, which grabs 25 320 x 240-resolution shots in a bit less than 3 seconds before stitching them all together into one 1,600 x 1,200 image. It's very handy for simulating the photo-booth effect or minutely analyzing your golf swing.
The company line on the EX-Z750 is that it packs the feature set of an Exilim Pro EX-P700 into the body of an Exilim EX-Z55; that's partially accurate, though the Z750 lacks the P700's wealth of bracketing options. A pleasant surprise is that the Z750 also incorporates a significant number of video features from the hybrid Exilim Pro EX-P505, giving it unexpected flexibility for movie capture. For instance, the Z750 can grab VGA-resolution (640 x 480) movie clips at 30 frames per second, a spec the P700 can't match. Casio has also snuck the very useful Short Movie and Past Movie features into this camera, both of which use the camera's memory buffer to start recording your videos before you hit the shutter. This comes in handy when you're trying to take video of unexpected moments, such as a hit at a baseball game or blowing out the candles at a birthday party.
Sponsored links
Olympus PEN, EP-1 & EP-2
Not a Compact. Not an SLR... It's a PEN!
The new Citi DIVIDEND World MasterCard
Get up to 5% cash back for every dollar charged to your card.
Win an ASUS UL Series Notebook!
Answer 3 simple questions and stand a chance to win an ASUS UL80Vt notebook worth over $1500!
Crack the code
Crack the code with Western Digital and stand to win the new PS3 (slim gaming console).
Just right. Nothing more.
The VAIO X Series. It’s everything you desire and nothing you don’t.
CNET Asia is now on Facebook!
Be part of the most happening tech community in Asia on Facebook
CNET Asia TV
Watch gadget reviews, quick tips, movie trailers and more for FREE.



