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Christmas gifts shop - Olympus SP-570UZ 10MP Digital Camera with 20x Optical Dual Image Stabilized Zoom

Olympus SP-570UZ 10MP Digital Camera with 20x Optical Dual Image Stabilized Zoom
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List Price: $449.99
Our Price: Too low to display
Manufacturer: Olympus
Average Rating: Rating: 4.5/5Rating: 4.5/5Rating: 4.5/5Rating: 4.5/5Rating: 4.5/5

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  • Batteries Included: 0
  • Binding: Electronics
  • Brand: Olympus
  • Display Size: 2.7
  • EAN: 0050332162976
  • Feature: 10-megapixel image sensor captures enough detail for photo-quality 18 x 24-inch prints
  • Floppy Disk Drive Description: None
  • Has Red Eye Reduction: 1
  • Is Autographed: 0
  • Is Memorabilia: 0
  • Label: Olympus
  • Manufacturer: Olympus
  • Maximum Focal Length: 92
  • Maximum Resolution: 10
  • Minimum Focal Length: 4.6
  • Model: 226355
  • Optical Zoom: 20
  • Publisher: Olympus
  • Release Date: 2008-04-14
  • Special Features: nv:Sensor^10 Megapixel|Size^1/2.33|Image Resolution^3648 x 2736|Movie Resolution^640x480|Memory Included^45MB Internal|Storage Media^xD-Picture CardTM (1GB, 2GB)|Compressed Format^JPEG, RAW|Movie File Format^AVI motion JPEG|Optical Zoom^20x|Digital Zoom^5x|Combined Zoom^100x|Focal Length^f= 4.60 - 92.0mm|Focus Mode^Manual|Focus Mode^Full-time AF|Focus Mode^Spot AF|Focus Mode^iESP auto|Focus Mode^AF|Focus Mode^Selective AF Target|Focus Mode^Face-Detection|Focus Mode^Predictive AF
  • Studio: Olympus
Manufacturer: Olympus
  • 10-megapixel image sensor captures enough detail for photo-quality 18 x 24-inch prints
  • 20x optical dual image-stabilized zoom
  • 2.7-inch HyperCrystal LCD
  • Perfect Fix in-camera editing; includes Olympus Master 2 software
  • Stores images on xD Picture Cards (not included)
With superior optics, power and portability, the SP-570 UZ provides a wealth of creative control without the expense of an SLR. Whether you're looking for 20x optical zoom or 13.5fps sequential shooting, this all-in-one, versatile, compact camera is great for outdoor, travel and sports photography. The powerful, ultra-compact lens gives you unmatched shooting versatility with its amazing 20x optical zoom to bring you close to the action, and the wide-angle lens that lets you easily capture more of your scene. By featuring the TruePic III Image Processor, your images will come through with true-to-life color, sharper detail, and less noise. As if all that wasn't enough, the SP-570 UZ also sports the new Face Detection technology, which recognizes and tracks faces within the frame to help you capture sharp, brilliant portrait photos. Focus Range Normal mode - Wide - 0.1m - infinity, Tele - 1.2m - infinity, Macro Mode - Wide - 0.1m - infinity, Tele - 1.2m - infinity, Super Macro mode - 1cm - infinity Auto - 1/2000 -1/2 sec. (up to 4 Sec. In Night Scene mode) Shutter Speed Manual - 1/2000 - 15 sec. Shutter Speed Auto, High Auto, 64, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, 3200, 6400 ISO 45MB Internal Memory (additional memory recommended to store more photos and video) Media Card Slot - xD-Picture Card (1GB,2GB) Built-in Flash with Auto, Red-Eye Reduction, Fill-in + Red-Eye Reduction, Slow Synchro1, Slow1 + Red-Eye Reduction, Slow Synchro2, Off Flash modes Flash Working Range - 0.3m - 6.4m @ ISO 400 Wide, 1.2m - 4m @ ISO 400 Tele USB Connector, Audio/Video Output, DC Input Approximate Unit Dimensions - 4.7(W) x 3.3(H) x 3.4(D) Approximate Unit Weight - 15.7oz (without battery & media card)

Customer Rating: Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5
Summary: Fantastic camera!
Comment: The Olympus SP-570UZ is handy, simple to learn to use and produces terrific results. I especially love the crispness of close-ups. I got it because it has a hot shoe but have not used the external flash yet. Otherwise, the 560UZ is just about as good. I highly recommend both of these models, but if you want the extra flash, get the 570UZ.

Customer Rating: Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5
Summary: Olympic Camera
Comment: I love this camera. I bought it for digital submissions of art work for my Advanced Placement Studio Art students and it takes wonderful images.

Customer Rating: Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5
Summary: Not what I'm used to in an Olympus
Comment: I have owned Olympus cameras for over 10 years now and have always had a great experience, so when I was ready to move up to a bigger model I of course looked to them.
I am so dissapointed though, not only am I out over $400, I have a camera that is inferior to my old olympus. I am not impressed by the quality of the prints this camera takes, I find it very cumbersome to use. I was so quick to focus on things with the little toggle button on my old camera and now I have to use two hands to focus this and for nothing more than show, it really isn't a camera that you have to move the lens cap to focus, it could easily be done with a toggle switch, but the manufacturer wanted it to appear more professional. I don't think the shoot button is laid out well either it is hard to man this camera with just one hand. The quality of the photos when you do a sports action, or multi frame action mode is horrible. I need to sit down with someone who knows cameras better than I to see if we can over ride the factory settings on that feature. I also didn't like how the unit opens to hook up the USB port to download the pictures onto your computer, it is a very tight fit and I am always worried about breaking something.
So to wrap it up, I wouldn't recommend this to someone who is not camera savvy, (doesn't know what Aperature means etc) or who wants some thing to just point and shoot.
A few features I do like though, are the scene and guide features where it has "dummy" settings for lighting, specific scenes etc. and as for the 20X zoom, it really does get you up close fast, and takes a fairly decent picture. I would have to say the 20X zoom takes much better photos than the standard photo taking mode.
Olympus has made some awesome cameras but this is not one of them.

Customer Rating: Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5
Summary: A good replacement for an SLR
Comment: I had my Canon XTi stollen. Very sad day. Loved it. But I needed a decent camera to take with me on a trip to SE Asia, and I had no time or money to research the new Canon XSi. SO I went with a review in some PC magazine and tried the Olympus SP-570UZ, especially appealing with Amazon's price. After about 2000 pictures, lots of experimenting, I am very happy with this camera. The image quality and sharpness is outstanding which is what I most require in any camera. Its long zoom (20x) results in very sharp, high quality images. Using it is pretty simple, but I encourage folks to learn how to use all the extra features. One has almost SLR control but there is also some simple settings and guides to just point and shoot photography. But more like, Think, point and shoot. If a SLR is out of your budget, or your need a second camera with your SLR, or would like to almost have an SLR but without the steep learning curve, this camera might work for you. This camera is definitely of the highest quality.

Customer Rating: Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5Rating: 5/5
Summary: Little Things Ruin It
Comment: I've read so many good things about this camera that I almost hate to be a detractor. But as a hard-shooting amateur, I find this camera frustrating in so many ways that I'm already seeking a replacement after just a few months.

Some of the big things are OK (build, weight, menu structure, view finder, LCD, battery life, memory) but some of the biggest things are not (auto-focus speed and accuracy, image stabilization, lens, menu defaults, controls, zoom). But even if you can live with some of the subjective choices made by Olympus on the big things, their choices on many of the little things are pretty frustrating.

The bottom line:

- I frequently miss shots with this camera.

- I frequently get blurry pictures across many lighting conditions.

- Even when I get the shot, the images, while not terrible, are sub-standard in many ways (and I don't think this is a subjective read on my part, nor do I think I have a defective unit).

This is not my first Olympus UZ. That was the Olympus C-2100 2MP Digital Camera w/ 10x Optical Zoom, with which I took about 16,000 pictures over the last 6 1/2 years. That camera was a pioneer in the UZ category, featuring 10X optical zoom (100X digital), the earliest image stabilization and a fabulous lens made by Canon. Its only real downside was the 2.1MP resolution (which was at the low end even as it was introduced). Mine ultimately developed some dead pixels on the sensor which led me into a very quick search for a replacement.

I'd had such good luck with the Olympus, that I didn't even consider other brands. After reading a handful of reviews which labeled this camera the best of its class, I didn't even hesitate. I assumed that time had improved most of the features, and that the learning curve would be fairly small. The latter proved true, the former did not.

At 10MP, resolution is not an issue. The ability to save RAW and JPG simultaneously is fabulous, though slow (I don't use it regularly). The view finder and LCD are great. Battery life (with hybrid rechargeables and a few tweaks to the default settings) is superb. Some people complain about the menu structure, but there are a lot of features on this camera. I think the menu structure is pretty good. And this camera does feel good in the hand. The built-in flash is also much more usable than the one in its predecessor.

That's where the good ends.

The first questionable thing I noticed is that the camera was making unexpected decisions on which portion of the frame to use for auto-focusing. These decisions were not good. I have a whole bunch of early shots with some arbitrary element of the shot -- often far from the center -- in focus while everything else is fuzzy. This turns out to be a "feature" called "iESP" mode in which, according to the manual, "The camera determines which subject within the screen to focus on." I quickly disabled it in favor of the "spot" mode (center of the frame gets the focus). There are additional modes available, and though I realize there will be times when iESP is a usable feature, it simply should not be the default.

This also turns out to be the first of several senseless defaults that I discovered as I worked through the menus. These include:

- Movies default to recording without sound.

- The "record view" (which shows each picture for a second or two immediately after taking it) defaults to ON, but also defaults to the LCD screen even if you're using the viewfinder, rendering it virtually useless. By the time you get the camera away from your eye to view the captured image, it's gone.

- When using the viewfinder, by default the control panel is visible on the LCD. Unless you change settings frequently, this is a needless drain on the batteries.

Once I got the auto-focus mode changed, that's when I began to realize just how poor it is. It's slow, frequently inaccurate, and performs especially poorly in anything other than direct sunlight. On my previous Olympus, I had become accustomed to a quick and perfect focus every time. With the 570, it sometimes takes three or four tries before it can focus, and it almost requires a hard edge somewhere within the AF target mark. This may help explain why iESP is the default: it allows the camera to search for hard edges in the frame and use those to get a quicker focus lock. Unfortunately, it also means weird auto-focus decisions.

I appreciate the extended zoom range of this camera, especially at the wide angle end. But this comes with serious trade-offs.

First, the lens has some serious pin-cushioning problems which even zooming cannot completely alleviate. I often have to use my camera to take pictures of images in square frames. This camera makes that an especially difficult task.

Second, at the telephoto end, autofocus becomes a painful problem. I also take lots of pictures from the stands at baseball games, and this camera performs very poorly in that type of setting. Even worse, the image stabilization is of very little help. In my previous Olympus camera, handheld was always an option -- even at the 100X end. With this, even a tripod cannot guarantee that the image you see in the view finder will be the image you get. The simple act of pressing the shutter button is often enough to make it reset, which is very frustrating.

These problems render the optional digital zoom portion as essentially worthless. When all is said and done, the usable telephoto zoom on this camera is about the same as the earlier model (though there is definitely more useful range at the wide angle end if you can live with the pin-cushioning).

You will see mention in almost every review of the zoom ring on the lens. Most reviewers dismiss it as "not too bad." I have to disagree. It's very, very bad in design and implementation.

Some photographers may be able to adjust to its quirks, but I find them simply unacceptable. First and foremost, the zoom does not respond exactly to the turning of the ring. Sometimes it stops before you stop moving your hand, other times it continues zooming after you have stopped moving your hand. Moving it slowly sometimes results in a slower zoom, but the threshold between slow and fast zooming is hard to find. It is possible to move the ring and get no change whatsoever in the zoom. As a result, accuracy with the zoom is nearly impossible.

Though the concept is a throwback to the old SLRs of my childhood, the more modern alternative (a small lever near the shutter release which can be operated by the index finger of your shooting hand) is far superior. The ring on the 570 essentially forces the use of two hands, and even then cripples your ability to frame a shot as you wish on the fly.

And finally, the zoom ring turns the wrong direction. Counter-clockwise zooms in, clockwise zooms out. I am forever getting this wrong -- another reason for missing shots.

This last piece, the direction to turn the control, is just one of many annoying smaller things found in this camera. Among these are:

- You must remove the lens cap when the camera is powered on. I prefer to leave the power on with the lens cap on, then just slip the lens cap off when I'm ready to shoot. That's not possible with this camera.

- If you forget to take the lens cap off, you get an error message, the camera locks up, and you must cycle the power off and on. At a minimum, this triples the boot-up time.

- The edge of the lens cap is very close to the surface of the lens. Finger smudges on the lens have become a very real and common problem.

- There are some very subtle differences between the "P" mode and the "Auto" mode of shooting -- limitations which you may not realize until you look at the pictures later (I used "P" initially, then switched to "Auto" when I discovered some subtle improvements to the results).

- The so-called "smile detector" feature is worthless. Don't buy this camera for that. It just plain doesn't work unless all the conditions are perfect (a rarity).

- The camera sounds are LOUD, even at their quietest setting. The alternative, "silent mode", is so quiet that you can't tell when the shutter has snapped.

- The shutter snap sound is artificial, and there is no tactile sense that the shutter has snapped. The older Olympus had a soft mechanical click, and it was essential. Over time, this -- along with shutter lag -- have served to differentiate between the professional DSLR class and the amateur UltraZoom. There is no question that this camera is aimed at amateurs (and not even at a "prosumer" class user).

- When reviewing photos, they are displayed in either the viewfinder or on the LCD based on which you were using to take photos. Viewing pictures is difficult in the viewfinder, and there should be an option to specify that the LCD is always used for reviewing. But there is no such setting.

Finally, when you get used to all of the quirks on this camera and get ready to take a family picture, you will discover that this camera does not support the use of a remote control. There is a time delay shutter release, but that's just not the same.

If I had known this, I would not have purchased this camera.

I suppose that none of these things would be deal-breakers if the image quality was as exceptional as I have become used to with Olympus cameras. But I find the images soft and the colors somewhat wan. I came to discover that there are various menu settings which allow these characteristics to be adjusted (picture mode, sharpness, contrast, and saturation), but that seems ridiculous to me. I want crisp images and accurate colors. That should be the default (and only) option on the camera. Even after I have adjusted these settings at great length, the image quality remains quite flat.

An additional frustration does creep in with regard to the menus. Though I find their organization to be quite easy to navigate, I find myself frustrated because certain menu options are unavailable based on mode settings. For example, I don't understand why the "Camera Menu" is grayed out and unavailable when the camera is in "Auto" mode.

If you are drawn to this camera for some of the gimmicky features I have not mentioned, I recommend that you think twice. Yes, there are lots of scene modes and image preview/editing options, as well as extensive bracketing and shooting parameters to adjust. But I consider these to be mainly toys, and I do not use them. If you are shooting portraits in a studio somewhere, such nuanced options may come in handy (but you probably wouldn't want an ultra-zoom in such a setting anyway). If you are taking pictures out in the real world, there is just not enough time to decide on and set the correct scene mode before you snap.

Two final things: First, the camera contains some internal memory which allows you to take pictures without using the optional xD memory card. But be careful not to lose the USB cable which comes with the camera. The camera-end connector is not standard, and without that cable there is no way to offload those pictures. (I found this out the hard way.) Second, though the quality of video clips is acceptable, the zoom range is severely hobbled when in the video mode. Full-range zoom is not possible when shooting videos.

As you can tell, the SP-570UZ has been a disappointment to me almost from the moment it came out of the box. It may be that this is truly the best camera currently available in this class, but if that is the case, the class has regressed since the C-2100UZ was released in 2001. That would be a shame.

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Useful: Camera Tips: Selective Focus Effects

Megapixel escalation is the name of the marketing game. How many megapixels do you really need? It all depends. Megapixels aren’t an arbitrary indication of quality—they mainly tell you how big a photo can be from the image file. If you make a 4x6-inch print, 2, 3 or more megapixels largely will give the same image if other things like the lens and internal processing chips are the same. A 2-megapixel camera will give excellent 4x6- and 5x7-inch prints. At 3 megapixels, you gain size so that superb 8x10- and 11x14-inch prints can be made; 4 megapixels give you larger prints yet, as well as the ability to crop into this larger file to still make excellent prints. You can crop a 4-megapixel file considerably to make a 4x6-inch print and still have it look great.
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