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This story was printed from CNET Asia.
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W50
By Will Greenwald, CNET.com
22/05/2006
URL: http://asia.cnet.com/reviews/digitalcameras/0,39005881,39101447p,00.htm


Your budget would have to be really tight to pass over the Sony Cyber Shot DSC-W50 in favor of the Sony DSC-W30. The two cameras are identical with a single exception: The DSC-W50's 2.5-inch LCD is a full half inch larger then the DSC-W30's. Otherwise, the W50 sports the same stats as its little brother. Both are 6-megapixel ultracompact cameras with 3x optical zoom lenses. They share the same body design, control layout, and feature set.

Design
At 101mm long and not quite an inch thick, the 192g DSC-W50 is a compact, easily pocketable point-and-shoot camera. Unfortunately, its small form includes small controls, and the small buttons are uncomfortable to use if you don't have small hands to match. However, Sony's menu system is direct and well designed, and the most common functions--timer, flash, macro, and exposure compensation--are accessible with one touch of the small control pad.

Surprisingly, Sony manages to fit an optical viewfinder on the DSC-W50's diminutive body. It's a tiny, cramped viewfinder, but it can prove handy if bright light washes out the LCD.

Features
The W50 runs almost entirely on automatic. You can choose between single- or five-area autofocus or select from a handful of preset focus distances; true manual focus is impossible. It also offers multipattern, center, and spot metering as the method for determining exposure, though you can adjust the exposure value using only exposure compensation--there's no way to select shutter speed or aperture.

The camera automatically picks from shutter speeds between a full second and 1/2,000 second, and aperture values between F2.8 to F5.2 (wide) and F7 to F13 (telephoto).

Like some other members of the W series, the DSC-W50 can reach as high as ISO 1,000 sensitivity for more shooting flexibility in low light. The camera lacks the dozens of different scene presets available on other cameras, such as the Canon PowerShot A540, but it does have a nice movie mode that can shoot VGA videos at 30fps.

The DSC-W50 also includes 32MB of onboard memory, but you'll still want a decent size Memory Stick Duo if you plan on taking more than a handful of photos at a time.

Performance
Since the W50's lens, sensor, body design, and imaging processor are identical to those of the W30, image quality and performance will follow suit. That model delivers pleasing performance, though it lags behind in burst mode. After a quick 1.6-second start-up, you'll get a shot-to-shot time of 1.4 seconds with shutter lag ranging from a very quick 0.25 second in bright situations to a sluggish 1.7 seconds in dim light.

The onboard flash recycles every 1.6 seconds for a relatively quick shot speed in low light despite the shutter lag. Unfortunately, burst mode is limited to 3 full-resolution shots at about 2.1fps; if you drop to VGA resolution, the number of frames goes up but only at a mediocre 1.5fps.

Image Quality
As we said about the W30, the photos have decent exposure and dynamic range, without the blown-out highlights produced by many cameras in this class. Colors are accurate but slightly oversaturated, especially the reds and oranges. Noise is the biggest issue with these models: While barely visible at ISO 80, smearing from the noise-reduction algorithm becomes evident at ISO 200 and starts to develop severe color shifts at ISO 400 and beyond. It's better than nothing if you can't use the flash, however.

The Sony Cyber Shot DSC-W50 is a decent ultracompact digital camera that makes up for its lack of controls with its solid performance and image quality. Its high sensitivity can give you passable low-light shots if you can get past the noise, and its compact form makes it an easily pocketable piece of tech.

Specs
General
Dimensions88.9 x 57.1 x 22.9 mm
Weight127 g
Inside The Camera
Optical sensorCCD
Sensor Resolution (max)6.1 megapixels
Resolution6 megapixels
Photodetectors (max)6.1 million
Photodetectors (effective)6 million
Zoom range3
Focal length38mm to 114mm (35mm equivalent)
Digital zoom6x
Light sensitivity (auto)80, 100, 200, 400, 800 ISO
Light sensitivityAuto ISO 80/100/200/400/800/1000
Lens apertureF2.8 to F5.2
Normal focus range (min)50 cm
Macro focus range (min)2 cm
MeteringMulti-segment/Multi-pattern, Center-weighted average, Spot
Creative controlsNo
Outside The Camera
LCD size (new)2.5 inch
Viewfinder typeOptical
Connection (new)USB
Battery type(s) (new)Lithium
Storage type(s)Internal memory
HotshoeNo
Image Capture
Still image format (new)JPEG
Max. image resolution (new)2816 x 2112
Digital video captureYes
Digital video format (new)MPG
Max video resolution (new)640 x 480 @ 30 fps
Audio captureYes