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Sony Cybershot DSC-H50

82

Very Good

  • Pros
  • Powerful 15x optical zoom
  • Tilting 3-inch LCD screen
  • Cons
  • Slow startup speed
  • Short battery life
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PC World Editor's Review

by Danny Palmerlee, PC World

Its Carl Zeiss telephoto lens and manual features are strong, but the focus-lock is erratic, and startup is slow.

Sony's new Cyber-shot DSC-H50 has some outstanding features. But it also has a few kinks that may or may not hang you up, depending on how picky you are about certain functions.

Any list of the DSC-H50's strengths begins with its Carl Zeiss 15X zoom lens. In 35mm terms, that's a whopping 465mm when the DSC-H50 is zoomed in as tight as it can be, and 15X is an impressive telephoto capability, given the size and weight of the camera (16 ounces). Shooting on the street, the lens opened up a world of subjects that otherwise would have been too distant for me to capture. I used the telephoto constantly, often shooting from the hip using the tilting LCD display (another great feature) to remain incognito. Sony's Super SteadyShot image stabilization kept most of the photos surprisingly sharp, even when I had the lens cranked to 15X on a cloudy day.

The H50's manual capabilities include aperture priority, shutter speed priority, and a fully manual mode, as well as bracketing modes for exposure, color, and white balance. You can even choose the amount of noise reduction applied to your photos in-camera. Two features I found particularly handy were the adjustable flash and the dedicated light-metering button. Notching the flash intensity down made for warmly lit indoor photos sans the blown-out-face problem so typical of on-camera flashes. And the metering button, located directly behind the shutter release, made switching between full-scene, center, and spot metering a cinch.

The DSC-H50 has plenty of other virtues, too: In our lab tests it scored as well as or better than its competitors in image quality, especially sharpness. In burst mode, the camera shoots 1.6 fps (frames per second), faster than the cameras we compared it with. The H50's mode dial is user friendly, making the manual functions and 12 scene modes easy to access. With a macro range of 1 cm, the camera takes superb close-ups. And the video (640 by 480 resolution at 30 fps) is excellent for its class. Finally, there's the smile sensor. Whether it's ultimately useful or not, setting the camera on a tripod and having the shutter trigger when everyone smiles is definitely great for laughs. 

But the DSC-H50 has some shortcomings. The LCD produces a somewhat jumpy image when panning, which I found irksome. Battery life is less than ideal: Our lab tests yielded 291 shots on a charge; in the field, it was noticeably short. While most of the camera's dials and buttons are logically placed, they can prove somewhat clumsy to use. The shutter button's sensitivity meant I often released the shutter when attempting to focus (though I eventually adjusted to this). Although the DSC-H50 has some advanced focusing capabilities (including child- and adult-priority face detection), I often found the camera wouldn't lock into focus when I wanted, causing me to lose the shot. And I was unhappy with the startup speed.

Overall, I did like the DSC-H50, especially the 15X lens and the tilting LCD. Eliminate the glitches (or ignore them), and you have a fierce little camera for a reasonable price (about $350 at the time of writing). 

--Danny Palmerlee

User Reviews for Sony Cybershot DSC-H50

  • Reviewed by: fabijw

    Duration of ownership: 2 Months

    Strengths: Great zoom, Good night shot

    Weaknesses: Wide angle lens is awful. Picture shows big shadow caused by flash. There is no aux to attach separate flash-not included on H50's. $150 lens made especially for this camera makes camera useless for interior designers and interior pic with flash.

    Overall Evaluation: Very upset. Sony unwilling to to assist.

  • Reviewed by: ryzvy

    Duration of ownership:

    Strengths: Versatile zoom range, Strong flash, delivers photos with pleasing natural colors, night-shot mode, feels good in the hand

    Weaknesses: Default photos a bit soft, wide angle and tele-photo not quite upto what the competition offers, battery life not that great, proprietary battery, hate the eyelets for the strap

    Overall Evaluation: I have been using this camera for over three months now. I bought it for a trip to Peru and it took great pictures on both the Machu-Pichhu trek as well in the amazon rain forest. The photos came out slightly soft for my liking but the color saturation and tone were spot-on. After slight tweaking in Picasa the results were amazing. The flash is strong, bright and adjustable and recycles fast. But I guess this also leads to a battery life that is by no means great. I would call the battery life adequate. I carried a spare on the trip and I lasted 5 days without having to recharge with about 1000 shots. The camera is very well made and has a nice heft to it without being heavy. It feel nice and comfortable in the hands. My biggest pet peeve with the camera is the eyelets for the strap that rotate continuously. It drives me nuts as I am a bit OCD about such things and am un-twisting teh strap non-stop.

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