Kodak EasyShare V603 - Review Roundup & Sample Pictures
Last updated: Review & Sample Photos @ ImagingResource (added on 15.11.06)
Kodak EasyShare V603 is a point-and-shoot digital camera (released on 18.02.06), featuring a 6.1 megapixels (CCD sensor) with 3x optical zoom lens, a 2.5″ LCD screen, and it’s running on common AA alkaline batteries. Kodak EasyShare V603 is priced at $299 USD, and should be in stores by April 2006.

Kodak EasyShare V603 Latest Price & User Opinions
>> REVIEWS (last update:15.11.06)
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Kodak EasyShare C663 - Review @ CamerasUK
CamerasUK have published a review of the Kodak EasyShare C663, a 6.1 megapixel compact digital camera with 3x optical zoom and a 2.5″ LCD screen.

“The first outdoor shot is good. As I would expect with a camera in this price range focusing does not match the levels achieved by more expensive models. The photo is bright and the colours are strong too. There is a loss of detail in the very light and very dark areas of each shot. This does not reach excessive levels, but can be noticed. Working indoors in poor light is another area where the results are somewhat mixed. The shot taken in more or less complete darkness shows a fuzzy photo where the camera has struggled to focus properly. “
>> Kodak EasyShare C663 Hottest Price
>> Kodak EasyShare C663 Review Roundup & Sample Photos
Kodak EasyShare V610 - Review @ DCRP
DCRP has recently published a review of the Kodak EasyShare V610, world’s Smallest 10X Optical Zoom 6.1 megapixel Digital Camera with Integrated Bluetooth Wireless Technologies and two Schneider-Kreuznach C-Variogon all-glass prism zooms (two CCDs) to cover a much wider 10x range (equivalent of 38-380mm).

“Camera performance was good in most respects. The V610 starts up quickly, focus times are decent, and shutter lag wasn’t a problem. There wasn’t much of a delay between shots, either. The continuous shooting mode was fair (eight shots at 1.8 fps), but most of the competition does a better job these days. The two areas in which the V610 didn’t perform well are battery life and zoom speed. The V610’s battery life numbers are by far the worst of any ultra zoom camera, with a CIPA score of just 135 shots per charge. The camera also takes almost five seconds to go from wide-angle to telephoto — and the zoom stops when you hit the “end” of one of the lenses, and you have to push the button again to continue zooming.”
>> Kodak EasyShare V610 Review Roundup and Sample Photos
>> Kodak EasyShare V610 Hottest Price
Kodak EasyShare V570 - Review @ Megapixel
Megapixel has recently posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare V570, the world’s first dual-lens digital camera with 5 megapixel CCD and 2.5-inch LCD Screen.

“PROS: Acceptable image quality outdoors and with good light, Dual lens concept interesting, Very compact camera with a good ergonomic design, 2.5-inch, high-res LCD monitor, Easy to use, Solidly built. CONS: 23 mm lens a bit too soft focus, Compression too strong, No compression choices, Flash underpowered, Sensitive to noise, LCD screen hard to see outdoors. “
>> Kodak EasyShare V570 Review Roundup and Sample Images
>> Kodak EasyShare V570 Latest Price
Kodak EasyShare One - Review @ CNET
CBET have recently posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare-One, a point-and-shoot digital camera with 4.0 megapixel CCD sensor, 3x optical zoom, and a huge 3″ LCD Screen. They rate the camera 4.8 out of 10 and write;

” photos have extremely even exposures, just shy of overexposed, with little visible color noise. Colors tend to look a little washed out but acceptable, and white balance is pretty decent. Unfortunately, the trade-off is that photos look best from a distance and not cropped too closely or printed larger than 5×7. At that point, the smeary background and lost detail as well as a few compression artifacts all become visible.”
Kodak EasyShare C663 - Review @ ImagingResource
ImagingResource has recently published a review of the Kodak EasyShare C663, a 6.1 megapixel compact digital camera with 3x optical zoom and a 2.5″ LCD screen.

“The Kodak C663 is a little sluggish at start-up, clocking in about five seconds from power up to first shot. The longest part of the start-up was waiting for the opening display of the Kodak EasyShare logo screen to disappear. …In daylight situations, image quality on the Kodak C663 is excellent, especially when shooting in the Natural Color setting. The camera captured very accurate skin tones which is a big plus for a models in this class which typically produce inconsistent results. “
>> Kodak EasyShare C663 Hottest Price
>> Kodak EasyShare C663 Review Roundup & Sample Photos
Kodak EasyShare Z612 - Review @ CNET
CNET has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare Z612, 6.1 megapixels (CCD sensor) point-and-shoot digital camera (released on 18.02.06) featuring 12x optical Keuznach Variogonzoom zoom lens and a 2.5″ LCD screen.

“As usual with cameras from Kodak, colors looked natural and well saturated in the Z612’s photos. The camera’s automatic white balance produced a very warm, yellowish color cast under our lab’s tungsten lights, though in natural daylight, it yielded neutral colors. The Z612’s tungsten white-balance setting fared better in the lab, though its images were slightly cool. Exposures were accurate, but the camera has a tendency to lose detail in brighter highlights. Worse than that was the heavier than normal purple fringing, as well as JPEG artifacts that caused jaggy edges on some curves and obscured some fine details in other areas of some images. “
>> Kodak EasyShare Z612 Review Roundup & Sample Photos
>> Kodak EasyShare Z612 Latest Price
Kodak EasyShare C643 - Review @ CNET
CNET has recently published a review of the Kodak EasyShare C643, a 6.1 megapixels (CCD sensor) point-and-shoot digital camera (released on 18.02.06) featuring 3x optical zoom (equivalent to 35-105mm) and a 2.4″ LCD screen.

” Kodak EasyShare C643. The lens produces serious purple fringing along the edges of high-contrast objects, and colored auras appear along almost every dark object with a light background. The higher-resolution sensor produces more noise; we noticed splotches and grain at ISO 80, and our ISO 400 test shot looked like a watercolor painting. As a result, the camera actually produces worse photos in this respect than its lower-resolution brother. On the other hand, its color reproduction and exposure look far better. “
>> Kodak EasyShare C643 Review Roundup & Sample Photos
>> Kodak EasyShare C643 Latest Price
Kodak EasyShare Z650 - Review @ ImagingResource
ImagingResource have published a review of the Kodak EasyShare Z650, a 6.1-megapixel point-and-shoot digital camera released on 04.01.06 featuring a 10x optical zoom(38 to 380mm), and a 2-inch LCD screen.

“With the Kodak EasyShare Z650, we found that it had enough resolution to make very crisp 8×10 inch prints. At 11×14, its prints were a bit softer looking, but more than adequate for wall or table display. At high ISO, its images became softer and noisier-looking. Under daylight-balanced lighting, some users might consider ISO 400 shots acceptable even at 8×10 inch print sizes, but to our standards, they’re really only usable at 5×7 inches…The Z650 shooting experience (once you’ve got it powered on, anyway) is generally a pleasure. Light enough in the hand to use single-handedly, there aren’t many subjects that escape its recording versatility. Nor do many escape the reach of its long zoom.”
>> Kodak EasyShare Z650 Review Roundup and Sample Photos
>> Kodak EasyShare Z650 Latest Price

