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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W30

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By David D. Busch, CNET.com


Sony's pocket-size shooter, the Cyber-shot DSC-W30, provides impressive photos and fast, easy operation in a simple package. Digital neophytes may question its modest allotment of seven scene modes, but the available exposure modes do a good job of handling most situations. In fact, snapshooters will likely be pleased with the results they get from this camera. However, a limited 3x zoom lens and a paucity of manual controls limit the DSC-W30's enthusiast appeal to those looking for a small second camera.

Sony's W series is aimed squarely at snapshooters. That means the Cyber-shot DSC-W30 lacks features advanced shooters demand, such as add-on lenses and manual exposure and focus. In fact, its existence in Sony's line is a bit of a mystery, given the tiny step up in price to the DSC-W50, which is essentially the same camera with a slightly larger screen.

Design
At 90 x 59 x 23mm, the 193g (including battery and memory card) Cyber-shot DSC-W30 is part of a new lineup of smaller 6-megapixel W-series cameras from Sony, which includes the DSC-W50, the DSC-W70, and the slightly larger DSC-W100. All four of these silver-toned, plastic-bodied cameras use the same 38mm-to-114mm Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar 3x zoom lens, but the W30 has a 2-inch LCD instead of the 2.5-inch screens that the other cameras in the line have. That puts the W30 squarely behind most of the competition as far as screen size, where 3-inch LCDs are becoming more common every day.

Surrounding the shutter release, the zoom lever is difficult to use when shooting one-handed. In fact, anyone with large hands or fingers will likely prefer two-handed shooting with this Sony. All the other controls are arrayed on the back. A tiny review button sits to the right of the small optical viewfinder; you'll need the latter when the LCD washes out in bright sunlight.

All the rest of the controls are stacked to the right of the LCD in an area less than 1 inch wide. The knurled mode dial offers a choice of Auto, Programmed, and Movie settings, along with notches for the Twilight, Twilight Portrait, Landscape, Beach, Snow, Soft Snap (soft focus), and High Sensitivity (ISO 1,000) scene modes. Under the mode dial is a Disp button for changing the LCD's information display and a menu key for accessing Sony's well-designed menu system, where you'll find setup options and settings that you normally adjust only once in a shooting session, such as ISO, white balance, and autofocus mode.

Features
Frequently used settings such as file size, exposure compensation, flash, and macro, as well as the 2- or 10-second self-timer can be accessed menu-free using the Quality/Trash button and the four-function cursor-control pad. To keep you from getting lost in the menus, full descriptions of each setting or mode appear on the LCD as you toggle through them. For example, when changing EV, a prompt reminds you that pressing down on the pad makes the image darker, while pressing up makes the image lighter. Scene modes have their own descriptors too; for example, the one for the High ISO setting helpfully notes that this mode is for "shooting without flash in low light, reducing blur."

While the camera doesn't include manual controls for exposure or focus, you can choose between five- or single-area autofocus points down to 1 inch from your subject (in macro mode) or manually set focus from among five preset distances between 0.5 meter and infinity. Both single- and continuous-autofocus (better for moving subjects) are available. You can also opt for multipattern, center-weighted, or spot metering. Shutter speeds range from 1 second to 1/2,000 second.

Other features include black-and-white, sepia, and enhanced saturation effects and a movie mode with in-camera trimming of clips. The DSC-W30 has 32MB of internal memory. It's nice in a jam, but you'll want to buy a Memory Stick Duo or a Memory Stick Pro Duo for any real shooting.