
Sony DSC-P1 Review, Phil Askey, September 2000
Welcome to Sony's smallest digital camera to date, sporting
a 3 megapixel imager and a 3 x optical zoom it's just 18 cm3
larger (by volume) than its nearest rival the Canon S20 at 252 cm3
compared to the P1's 270 cm3. Of course the S20 only has a
2 x zoom lens, weighs in 70 g heavier and the long / thin design of the
DSC-P1 is somehow more appealing which makes it appear smaller than the
S20. It has the head turning "ooh.. ahh.." factor.
Sony, with their incredible resources have the ability
to react to the market extremely quickly, they saw that people wanted
smaller digital cameras and produced the P1. Its sleek rounded lines,
metallic case, high resolution, good zoom lens, crisp 1.5" LCD and
excellent InfoLithium battery appear to place it in the market as an extremely
desirable digital camera.. But how does it fair in real life? Read on...

Baby S70?
Probably the most common comparison people will make
with the P1 is to its bigger brother the S70,
as the P1 shares the same 3.34 megapixel imager, a 3 x optical zoom (although
not Carl Zeiss) and very similar onboard software it really does look
like a baby S70. However, there are some important differences:
| |
Sony
DSC-P1 |
Sony DSC-S70
|
| |
 |

|
| MSRP |
US$ 799 |
US$ 999 |
| Imager |
3.34
megapixel 1/1.8" CCD (3.14 megapixel effective) |
| Lens |
3x Sony
F2.8 - F5.3 |
3x Carl
Zeiss F2.0 - F2.5 |
| Lens thread |
No |
Yes, via
adapter |
| Auto lens cover |
Yes |
No |
| Normal focus |
50 cm |
25 cm |
| Macro focus |
10 cm |
4 cm |
| Image sizes |
2048 x
1536, 2048 x 1360, 1600 x 1200, 1280 x 960, 640 x 480 |
| Image modes |
JPEG,
TIFF, GIF (B&W) |
| A/D Converter |
12-bit |
| ISO |
Auto (100-300) |
| White balance |
Auto,
Indoor, Outdoor, Hold |
| Auto Focus |
Contrast
detection |
| Manual Focus |
No |
Yes |
| Exposure modes |
Auto,
Twilight, Twilight+, Landscape, Portrait |
Auto,
Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority, Twilight, Twilight+, Landscape,
Portrait |
| Metering |
Center-weighted,
Spot |
| Flash modes |
Auto,
Anti-red-eye, Fill-in, Off |
| Flash range |
2.3 m |
2.5 m |
| External Flash |
No |
Yes (Sony
connector) |
| Movie |
MPEG1:
320 x 240 (HQ), 320 x 240, 160 x 112 |
| Animated GIF |
Yes, 160
x 120 or 80 x 72 |
No |
| LCD |
1.5"
TFT 123,200 pixel |
2.0"
TFT 123,200 pixel |
| Viewfinder |
Yes,
optical |
| Playback zoom |
Yes,
1.1x to 5.0x |
| Storage |
MemoryStick
(8 MB supplied) |
| Connectivity |
USB,
AV output |
| Power |
Sony NP-FS11
InfoLithium 3.6V 4.1Wh
(1140 mAh) ~ 70 mins recording |
Sony NP-FM50
InfoLithium 7.2V 8.5Wh
(1180 mAh) ~ 110 mins recording |
| Charger |
AC
Adapter & Charger supplied (battery charges in-camera) |
| Voice recording |
Yes |
| Dimensions |
114 x
54 x 44 mm
(4.5 x 2.1 x 1.7 ") |
117 x
70 x 65 mm
(4.6" x 2.8" x 2.6") |
| Weight (inc.) |
250 g
(8.8 oz) |
420 g
(14.8 oz) |
If you're new to digital photography you may wish to
read the Digital Photography
Glossary before diving into this review (it may help you understand
some of the terms used).
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Photographs of the camera
were taken with a Nikon D1, images which can be viewed at a larger
size have a small magnifying glass icon in the bottom right corner
of the image, clicking on the image will display a larger (normally
1024 x 768 or smaller if cropped) image in a new window.
To navigate the review simply
use the next / previous page buttons, to jump to a particular section
either pick the section from the drop down or select it from the
navigation bar at the top.
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This review is Copyright 2000 Phil
Askey and the review in part or in whole may NOT be reproduced in any
electronic or printed medium without prior permission from the author.
For information on reproducing any part of this review (or any images)
please contact: Phil Askey.
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