Megapixel.net have just posted their review of the Kodak P712 and had report that this camera produces very good image quality with JPEG Fine, excellent using the RAW format. Not too many non-SLR cameras iclude RAW mode, the best mode around.
“The ergonomic design of the P712 is well thought out, the placement of the controls works well, and the camera responds relatively quickly to its controls. The high resolution of the EVF helps to frame images accurately, and the fact that both monitor and EVF have a 60 frames per second refresh rate makes them them very fluid while following a moving subject. Less practical, however, is the comparatively slow start of the camera, the lens taking nearly 3 seconds to deploy.”
Kodak Easyshare P712
According to Kodak, its 7.1-megapixel EasyShare P712 was designed for “second- and third-time digital camera buyers.” The camera includes a higher level of control than many of Kodak’s cameras, such as manual white balance, full manual exposure, and a trio of custom picture modes. It also features a hotshoe, which can be outfitted with an accessory flash and can record images as RAW, TIFF, or JPEG files. Anyone stepping up from a simple point-and-snap camera will likely be impressed with the level of control offered, as well as the 12X optical, 36mm-to-432mm, f/2.8-to-f/3.7 zoom lens, but a slightly sluggish start-up time and noisy images at higher ISOs will irk more advanced snapers.




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