Review 2 of 37
Summary: Here's my story... I wanted to start with photography, but I'm kind of impatient when it comes to art and waiting for the film to develop to find out how the picture ended up, and knowing my personality and the fact that I liked computers, I decided to get a digital camera. I had a limited budget/I didn't want to invest a ton into an expensive camera, plus I was a beginner, so I wanted something to start off that wouldn't feel limitting, yet would not put me over the top with excess features that just made it cost more (or features that I wouldn't find a use for until later). I read plenty of reviews and decided on this camera, the Fuji DX-10. I also read about people getting a coupon for a Floppy disk adpater (the FlashPath) which I luckily found a month or so before the offer expired. Paid $300 at Sears a over a year ago. Affordable, but not so affordable that it wasn't worth getting. Since I'm so picky, I needed a camera that did enough of what I wanted, and this does. Still very satisfied overall. Strengths: Affordable, but not so affordable that it wasn't worth getting. Since I'm so picky, I needed a camera that did enough of what I wanted, and this does. Still very satisfied. Nice and small, looks like a 35mm camera. Nice grip. Optical viewfinder pretty useful (saving batteries, sunny places, etc.). Comes with a good display on the back, decent resolution (switches between 640x480 and 1024x768) good color, good sharpness. Read weknesses for things to look for (if you are picky or end up needing more, like me). Weaknesses: Problems with movement (large delay before picture actually taken) and low lighting without a flash (ends up blurry). Eats batteries (most cameras probably do :-) but problem is easily solved with some nice NiMHs and a charger. No zoom (digital zoom works fine, for what it offers). VERY slow download over serial, but great with a Floppy disk adapter (FlashPath, or proabably a USB reader), but livable. Similar Products Used: I ended up supplementing the _small_ 2MB card with an 8 MB card, and eventually a 16 MB card (which it supports, contrary to the documentation, etc.) The camera works great with the FlashPath floppy adapter (which is also compatible with the 8MB and 16MB cards, contrary to what the documentation says). Can't really compare to a 35mm or other camera, since this is my first, but this camera allowed me to get to what I would consider an intermediate stage in photography. Hoping to get an Olympus 3000 Zoom (when I get the cash)... it has all the features I want. Also, don't get this camera (I don't know that they sell it anymore)... get the newer camera, the MX-1200, identical (I think) but comes with 4MB and has higher resolution; I saw it new for $200 (some reviews say $150 after rebate). Customer Service: N/A I had no significant problems with this camera (and I'm kind of a do it yourself-er) but it looks like it wouldn't be a problem.
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