PANASONIC: Digital camera boasts a 28-mm wide-angle lens made by Leica


Sunday, February 4th, 2007

Little Lumix is just 22 mm thick

Jim Jamieson
Province

What is it? Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX30 digital camera

Price: $449

Why you need it: You’re looking for something just a little

different in a point-and-shoot digicam, but still want quality, performance and ease of use.

Why you don’t: You’ve had a digital camera for a while and are ready to move on to the single-lens-reflex world.

Our rating: 4 mice

If you’re looking to squeeze more people into your pictures and want a tiny camera to do it with, the Lumix DMC-FX30 is worth looking at.

Ten-per-cent smaller than its predecessor, Panasonic claims the DMC-FX30 is the thinnest digicam on the market, with a 28-millimetre wide-angle lens.

If you’re looking for something you can easily slip into a pocket or a handbag, this camera will accommodate you. It is just 95 x 52 x 22 mm, while it tips the scales at just 154 grams.

The lens, made by Leica, is a 3.6x optical zoom (equivalent to 28-100 mm on a 35-mm film camera), so it allows users to fit more people in a group shot or capture sweeping landscapes or large structures.

Megapixels have long been used erroneously as a benchmark to determine the capability of a digital camera, but the Lumix DMC-FX30’s 7.2 megapixels is a bonus to go along with its very good optics.

The DMC-FX30, which features a 2.5-inch LCD on the back and a rechargeable lithium-ion battery, also incorporates a wide variety of scene modes for different situations, including new Pet and Sunset modes.

It is also capable of taking digital video at 640 x 480 (30 frames per second).

Available in March at electronic and camera stores.

© The Vancouver Province 2007

 



Comments are closed.