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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P72 3.2 Megapixel Compact Camera

Cyber-shot DSC-P72 3.2 Megapixel Compact Camera

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$484.98

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Review: Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P72

Sony's compact point-and-shoot offers a pleasing balance of useful features and moderate price.

WHAT'S HOT: Sony's Cyber-shot DSC-P72 is reasonably priced at $330 and easy to use for casual photography. Its compact shape fits comfortably in one hand, and the controls on the back are located within easy reach of the average thumb, which makes the camera convenient for one-handed operation. You can change most of the camera's settings with just a few button presses. The DSC-P72 is one of the few digital cameras with high-speed USB 2.0, which should, in theory, shorten the time it takes to transfer images from the camera to your computer.

Powered by two rechargeable nickel metal hydride AA batteries (included in the box along with a charger), the camera took an impressive 462 shots on one charge in our tests. Should you forget to charge up its standard batteries, the Cyber-shot can also run on two standard AAs.

WHAT'S NOT: The Cyber-shot's automatic focus feels slow to lock on to subjects. Despite the built-in autofocus illuminator (a light beam that helps the camera focus in dim settings), the Cyber-shot also seemed slow when taking flash photos. If surprising your subjects for candid shots is your goal, you might look for a different camera.

WHAT ELSE: Based on our lab tests, the DSC-P72's overall image quality is about average for a 3-megapixel camera. Photos taken in daylight had rich, accurate colors, though most of the shots were slightly underexposed. Portraits looked nicely crisp, but our close-up photo was not as sharp as samples from the Olympus and Nikon models that we tested at the same time. Our outdoor test photo looked slightly darker than it should have (resulting in lost details in shadows), and we spied a small but noticeable amount of speckling in what should have been a solid blue sky--an effect of electronic noise within the camera.

Our test flash shot of our mannequin model had a somewhat unflattering skin tone and an odd brown shadow--almost like a dirty halo--along her left side. That's something we have not seen with most other digital cameras. We took a few casual flash shots around the office of our coworkers (in areas with more ambient daylight than florescent lighting) and the halo effect did not appear.

Main exposure controls include white balance, ASA speed, exposure value, and five scene settings: twilight, twilight portrait, landscape, snow, and beach. The last one is designed to accurately capture sea blue, but we did not test it.

This may not be the best camera for sports fans: It has no sports or action setting among the various scene modes, and in burst mode, the Cyber-shot can take only two photos before it has to save the images to its Memory Stick media. It has a MultiBurst setting, in which the camera takes 16 pictures in quick succession, but the result looks like a low-resolution video clip. The camera records video and audio; you can record an audio note to accompany a photo when you snap a photo, but you can't record one later.

Other functions in this camera could have been better thought out. You can view nine pictures at once on the 1.5-inch LCD screen--it's a fast way to pick several photos and delete them all at once. But deleting a single photo in this mode requires seven button presses--even though the camera has a dedicated delete button (it's far easier just to display one picture on the screen and use the button). The camera lets you create folders in its Memory Stick media to organize your photos, but you can't delete folders within the camera.

Sony offers a remarkable lineup of extras for its point-and-shoot, including wide-angle and telephoto conversion lenses, polarizing and neutral-density filter kits, and an external flash. Adding conversion lenses to the Cyber-shot is, however, somewhat awkward, because you must attach a relatively bulky adapter.

Sony ships Pixela ImageMixer with the DSC-P72--it's a basic program for editing photos and movies, and for organizing albums. It's convenient for downloading images; for other tasks, however, we found its interface to be difficult to figure out (though it has a deceptively simple appearance).

UPSHOT: Solidly built and compact, the Cyber-shot DSC-P72 is a point-and-shoot for the mainstream--modestly priced and relatively easy to use, with all the features you need for casual photography.

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