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Thursday, December 25, 2008

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W150

Above the display is an optical viewfinder so you can shut off the display when battery life is low, but it's uncomfortably small for frequent use. The controls feel tiny and crowded but manageable, even for big fingers. You access context sensitive settings through the Menu button, while the Home button calls up all the camera's options. This can be confusing at first, but makes sense after using it a bit.

A small, slightly sunken dial lets you choose from 10 shooting modes, including Sony's Smile Shutter, which takes a photo when it detects a smile; three for low light shooting and Program Auto with control over ISO, white balance (no manual, though), flash intensity, exposure value, and color. There is no full manual mode, but the Program Auto controls offer more flexibility than most manufacturers include in this class.

Also atypical for its price, the W150 incorporates a 5x f3.3-5.2 28-140mm equivalent lens. That's wider and longer than many.

If you like to edit or play back images on your camera, Sony does a better job than most to make it fun and easy.

There are a handful of effects (some cooler than others) that you can add to images, as well as basic cropping and red eye retouching.

There's a dedicated slide show button, too, for impromptu presentations with music and effects. An optional dock lets you connect the W150 to a TV. Combine the lens, 8 megapixel CCD, 2.7 inch LCD, an optical viewfinder, and a lot of shooting and playback controls and you have an excellent feature to price ratio. Overall, it performs very well. While start up takes a long time at 1.9 seconds, the W150 delivers solid shutter lag times in dim and bright conditions of 0.9 and 0.4 second, respectively.

The average shot to shot time is a better than average 1.5 seconds, but adding the flash more than doubles that time to 3.7 seconds the only real disappointment. But if you like shooting sports or other subjects on the move, the W150 has a very fast (for its class) continuous shooting speed of 1.9 frames per second it can sustain that rate for about 9 frames with a standard card, and up to capacity with a 30MB per second card.

The lens zooms smoothly, and Sony's Super SteadyShot optical image stabilization works well to minimize blur when the lens is fully extended, too. However, it exhibits noticeable barrel distortion in its widest position and minor pin cushioning when fully zoomed out not out of the ordinary for point and shoot models.

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