FujiFilm FinePix A205 Zoom (FinePix A205s)

1.9 megapixels | 1.5" screen | 36 – 108 mm (3×)

User reviews

Average rating: 4.58
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Lucas Frizzo
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By: Lucas Frizzo posted on Jul 13, 2006 UTC

Opinion: Ive had this camera almost 4 years. I love to mess around with the EV and WB. It realy makes the pictures come out fantastic. This is a great beginners camera, worth every penny. Its small and not heavy at all, just a little wide.

Problems: I got some dirt in around the lens zoom area and so now sometimes it says I have a zoom error. I find it very annoying because it usually happens right when I have the perfect photo op. (Just my luck)

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ovib
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By: ovib posted on Jul 20, 2005 UTC

Opinion: A good camera! I use like a web-cam ;)

Problems: No sound video!

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stella1
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By: stella1 posted on May 25, 2005 UTC

Opinion: I bought this camera over a year ago and I love it. Very easy to use for a first time "digital camera" buyer. I have had no problems with it and the quality of the pictures are awesome. I would recommend it to anyone. My 9 year old niece can take pictures with it and enjoys it.

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Edfrancis
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By: Edfrancis posted on Feb 11, 2005 UTC

Opinion: Bought this camera about 4 months ago, and it goes everywhere with me, like a visual diary. I take hundreds of images a month with it. It's not pretty, but it's not so tiny you can't hold it still, like so many fashion statements posing as cameras. I bought it to try out digital photography, having used top name film cameras for decades.

The battery life is amazing, particularly if you have the flash option set to off - the flash doesn't have to charge up each time you start the camera. The flash is very good even at close range, though I avoid flash like the plague as a general rule. The camera is so easy to use at night. Pull out the tripod, set the self timer, and click. That's it. Well, almost... its very low light focussing isn't fantastic, but then, I paid about $150 Australian for it, new. The focussing in normal lighting is excellent, as long as you use the focus lock - tell the camera where you want it to focus by lining up the focus marks in the viewfinder on the subject, press the shutter partway down, reframe then take the photo. Basic stuff, really, dear reader, but how many cameras are canned because prople don't think? The macro is quite excellent.

2mp means you dodn't buy it for poster prints, but regular postcard sized prints are fantastic. The optics are more than a match for the number of pixels available.

No, the optics aren't Olympus or Leica grade, but it doesn't draw any attention to the user, its price puts it almost into the disposable category - but you wouldn't want to because it's so reliable, so easy to use you can give it to someone who's never used it and just tell them to "look at the picture on the back, then press the button," and expect an acceptable result. With care, the results are amazing. If you want 20x 30 prints, well, use film!

Problems: None. Except they're not made anymore, to my knowledge.

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Tony-Liverpool
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By: Tony-Liverpool posted on Aug 14, 2004 UTC

Opinion: As a novice i found the camera very easy to use and would tell anybody new to digital photography to buy it.

Problems: not yet.

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Dermot Conner
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By: Dermot Conner posted on Jun 23, 2004 UTC

Opinion: I recently purchased one of these for my ex-wife as a 'just takes pictures' camera, assuming that $100 would yield an extremely mediocre device, but adequate for snapshots of better quality than she would get from a disposable film camera. How wrong I was. In all honesty, this is a perfectly usable little camera. I only played around with it for an hour or so and can't comment on battery life or longevity, but I'm used to an EOS 10D so I'm a bit picky and I'm familiar with the field. My impressions are as follows:
Lens: Average speed, good sharpness across the frame, no obvious chromatic abberation (though I didn't play in bright daylight, so YMMV) and it focuses quickly and positively if you give it reasonable light (no built in AF assist light obviouly). Barrel extension takes a couple of seconds, and the zoom is a bit 'notchy' (no fine control) and actuated by buttons on the 4-way pad (which I dislike, feels unnatural to me)

Display: Low resolution, but still perfectly adequate for framing a shot. Keep in mind that this is a point & shoot, if you intend to use manual focus for anything much beyond setting it to infinity, buy a different camera. (I didn't even try it, but even if it has a magnifying reticle that comes on with manual focus, I don't think the LCD resolution would be adequate even then)
The primary irritation I had with the display was a noticable compromise made to fit menus and control data on screen, they are very heavily anit-aliased and look a little amateurish. I don't know if Fujifilm were unable to design their fonts and graphics around the particular display for any technical reason, but I wish they had. Like it's ilk, I don't imagine it's much good in bright sunlight either. The update speed of the display was perfectly adequate, and in line with much more expensive cameras of a year or two ago.

The viewfinder worked pretty much exactly as you'd expect. I doubt many folk who use the camera will bother with it. (The display is active by default) I didn't bother checking frame coverage etc, nor did I take any macro shots so I don't know how well the 'macro' box etched into it will work either.

The controls are minimalist, 4-way pad, power switch, 3 position function selector (around the shutter release), display button (to activate the LCD among other things), an 'OK' button and a 'Back' button are all I can remember. There is a degree of 'one button' control, but not as much as I'm used to :-) However, the menu system is relatively easy to navigate (once you get a feel for how they like you to do it, slightly counter-intuative for me to begin with) and this really isn't a camera for people who want lots of manual control. The buttons feel plastic-y, mostly because that is exactly what they are. They do have a positive click and seem easy to press reliably. The camera does buffer a few button pushes so navigation isn't too much of an exercise in frustration.

The camera comes with it's own 'looks like a mini-USB cable but isn't' cable, and a composite out adapter so you can plug it directly into a TV (PAL & NTSC supported, which is nice)

It takes 2 AA batteries, which has got to be the lowest possible common denominator power source for such a beast. I didn't seem to beat them to death at anywhere near the rate my c1999 Fujifilm finepix did (and it took 4, not 2)

The photos taken seemed to have nice colour balance, were nicely exposed, sharp, held a nice amount of detail and needed minimal post-processing for consumer shots. Red-eye didn't seem to be nearly as much of an issue as I would have expected. The flash is adequate and nicely rationed (no blown out highlights in any of the shots I took, despite some very close up ones of shiny faces)

The PC side seemed fine, I didn't play with the software bunde much, but the camera supports both a native communication mode (allowing it to integrate neatly with it's own software) and USB Mass Storage Device mode allowing it to mount as just another disk. It did come with OS X versions of the application, which is a nice touch. USB 1.1 transfers are slow and tedious, but they get the job done.

The biggest complaints I would have with it are, in order of irritation value:
Slow processing. Both startup and shot to shot times are decidedly 2001. Not unreasonable, not unusable, but irritating. I found the time to save high quality images especially long, several seconds.
The camera did not fit well in my hand, it is deceptively thick (doesn't look it in the photos) and kind of angular and weird feeling. This may of course simply be me being used to DSLRs, and picky.
The protective slide over the lens (a good thing, always) does not turn the camera on when opened, or off when closed. Perhaps Olympus has a patent on that or something? Sliding it open with the camera off did nothing. Sliding it closed with the camera on caused the lens to retract and the display to say something like 'lens cover closed!!!' which seems like a waste of a switch to me. I recall them makeing a fuss of their battery saving magic, perhaps it is related to that as well, though I can't see how.
The plastic body of the camera definitely feels built down to a price, though it gave the impression that it was sturdy enough. The fit and finish didn't get much of the R&D budget it would appear.
The zoom control uses the up and down buttons on the 4-way pad, thereby saving a couple of buttons. I dislike that, though that is a matter of taste.
No flash hot-shoe (what a surprise)
The USB connection for the PC is NOT a MiniUSB (though the connector looks superficially like it is) so be extra careful with that cable. Also keep in mind that if you use a card reader, you'll need to open the battery compartment every time you take a card out.
The video capability is a joke. The quality is fine, but it sucks storage like a drowning man, and it doesn't record audio. If you want a video camera, buy a video camera. This isn't one. If you simply want to record very shot, silent clips, and storage isn't a problem, it works fine, but for anything else, it's a dead loss.

With all the above said, I loved it, I am actually very very very tempted to go out and buy myself one as a 'glove compartment' camera I'm not afraid to have stolen or drop. For the money, I can't imagine it being possible to beat it. Just not possible. Fantastic value for money. Of course, if you go second hand, you might do better (but don't bet on it), but this camera is squarely aimed at folk who do not WANT to go second hand, they want to walk in to BestBuy, and walk out with a green cardboard box with a camera in it, and to those folk I would say, go for it!

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PHIL
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By: PHIL posted on Mar 31, 2004 UTC

Opinion: After having gone off Fuji for some time now and being disappointed in the colour rendition of many other cameras, I thought I'd give this one a try. At only £99.90 from Jessop's its an amazing bargain. Ok so the body is plastic but it seems of a very thick gauge so should stand a few knocks without disintegrating.
The resolution although only 2 megapixels is more than enough for general shots, I've had worse from some 3 megapixel cameras (Ricoh). Excellent for online auction close-ups, the flash shuts down well so no overexposing.
Nice easy to see and understand menu - should suit just about anyone from a child to pensioner.
Amazing battery life- goes for ever on 2300 NiMH rechargeables.
Now you can buy XD card readers (I got a dual Smartmedia/ XD one again from Jessop's) The new format of storage for Fuji is less of a pain. (I hate using the lead connected to the camera, I always think its going to snap the plug or the circuit board.)
Altogether an excellent deal and I thoroughly recommend it. Well done this time Fuji (and with no interpolation either)

Problems: Screen hard to see in bright sun but there's a lot of others like that!!
Be careful of the zoom lens when extended - those on earlier models (ie 2600) tended to break off very easily - be warned!!Fuji don't supply spares.

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CARCOMike
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By: CARCOMike posted on Mar 11, 2004 UTC

Opinion: This is a great Camera for the first time user.
It also has every KEY feature that I require for my business - Separate buttons for Flash and Macro modes (no awkward menu searching), and LCD screen for image preview, and a USB connection with a no fuss install and drive letter access to the images on the camera.
PERFECT !
One note - invest in rechargeable batteries and a charger.
The camera does a very good job at conserving battery power, but you will eat thru alkaline batteries in a hurry.

Problems: None so far

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Sacha2004
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By: Sacha2004 posted on Mar 3, 2004 UTC

Opinion: The construction is chunky, but lightweight, very easy to use, image quality good for a 2MB model. It has all the features you would need as a keen snapper, but naturally, if you want huge prints, you would not go for a unit like this. Takes standard AAs, good life for rechargeable cells. LCD is a little small, but bearable. Downside is having to buy the docking unit separately, but you will not need it. A bit basic, small CCD and too chunky for some tastes, but it has a nice feel about it and does what it sets out to well.

Problems: XD slot and batteries use same compartment. Slightly 'plastic' construction, a little bulky.

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