
From Kodak
6-megapixel CCD captures enough detail for photo-quality 14 x 19-inch prints
2.8-inch LCD display; 10x image-stabilized optical zoom
Video capture at 30 frames per second VGA (MPEG 4 compression)
Bluetooth enabled, allowing for wireless photo transfer (with compatible devices) from up to 30 feet away
Stores images on SD memory cards (includes 32 MB internal memory); powered by Lithium-ion battery
2.8-inch LCD display; 10x image-stabilized optical zoom
Video capture at 30 frames per second VGA (MPEG 4 compression)
Bluetooth enabled, allowing for wireless photo transfer (with compatible devices) from up to 30 feet away
Stores images on SD memory cards (includes 32 MB internal memory); powered by Lithium-ion battery
Eastman Kodak Company today introduced the Kodak EasyShare V610 dual-lens digital camera, the world's smallest 10x (38-380 35mm equivalent) optical zoom camera at less than an inch thick. Using innovative Kodak Retina dual-lens technology, the sleek, pocket-size V610 camera precisely combines two Schneider-Kreuznach C-Variogon all-glass, non-protruding prism lenses to deliver such a long zoom range--a first for a camera so small (just 4.4 x 2.2 x 0.9 inches).
I know this camera is over a year and a half old but it's better than a lot of the ones coming out today! I see that it is 6 megapixels and the newer ones are 12 megapixels and over, but things like the optical and digital zoom on this one are 10x and 5x zoom. The ones I'm seeing now are only 3x optical zoom, which doesn't make much sense to me. I'm still getting compliments on my camera over a year later. Plus, it's an integrated lens camera, which is much better than the ones that are coming out now, in my opinion. So yes, I'd recommend this one to anyone looking for a good camera without worrying about getting the newest and best megapixel amount.
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