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Friday, December 26, 2008

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T300

Besides its stylish sliding lens cover (a signature feature on all Cyber-shot T-series cameras), the T300's display stands out as its most notable feature. You control almost every aspect of the camera via a 3.5 inch touch screen LCD, leaving just a power button, a playback button, a shutter release, and a zoom rocker as its only physical controls. The screen dominates the entire back panel of the camera, barely leaving half a centimeter around it for the bezel.

On the bright side, this huge screen gives you a large, bright view of your pictures and the menus. On the other hand, it leaves almost no room for your thumb to rest while shooting. A large, sturdy lanyard mount on the right side of the camera offers some space, but big thumbs will still tend to brush against the touch screen. Even if you can shoot without accidentally tapping the screen, you're still going to have to delve into the camera's menu system at some point.

The menus aren't just irritating they're downright neurotic and take far too long to navigate, requiring constant reassurance with countless taps of "OK." Change the resolution, hit "OK."

Change the white balance, hit "OK." Enter the camera settings menu by hitting "OK," then confirm each setting by hitting "OK" again. As Sony's highest end point and shoot, the T300 includes all the latest features.

It sports an optically stabilized f/3.5-4.4 33mm to 165mm equivalent 5x zoom lens that delivers a surprisingly long reach for a slim camera.

Unfortunately, that reach comes at the cost of wide angle and speed a 28mm, f/2.8 lens would have been preferable, even if it didn't offer a 5x zoom. The T300 also features several face detection shooting modes, including Adult and Child Priority, which let the camera identify kids or adults faces in group photos and adjust focus and exposure accordingly, and Smile Shutter, which delays shooting until the subject smiles.

A suite of on board photo editing and retouching tools take full advantage of the huge touch panel and included lanyard tethered stylus. A rudimentary paint program lets you draw on your pictures, and cropping and resizing tools can trim them to fit 16:9 wide screen displays, scale down to VGA (640x480) for emailing, or simply crop out bits you don't want to keep.

A variety of effects offer even more options, including digital red eye removal, radial blur, soft focus, and fish eye lens tools that can focus on a single spot in a picture with a tap of the stylus. Finally, the T300 includes a Happy Faces feature that automatically turns frowns upside down.

When you take a portrait and the subject doesn't smile, Happy Faces distorts the subject's mouth to give them a smile. The end results range from surprisingly realistic to Jokeresque. All of the T300's editing tools automatically create copies of pictures you edit; the original shot is preserved, while changes are saved to new files.

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