Fujifilm FinePix A700 Camera

Fujifilm FinePix A700 CameraFujifilm have announced the FinePix A700 compact digital camera, a shiny new addition to their entry-level ‘A’ series camera range.

Kitted out in a rugged-looking silver body, the A700 features a 7.3 megapixels sensor (Fujifilm’s proprietary Super CCD), a large 2.4″ LCD monitor and 3x mid-range optical zoom (36 – 108mm, f2.8 – f5.2, 35mm equivalent).

Designed to appeal to first time buyers or punters looking for a cheapo upgrade to their first digital camera, the Fujifilm offers point’n’shoot simplicity backed up by just a handful of scene modes: Portrait, Landscape, Sport and Night.

Fujifilm FinePix A700 CameraUnlike Fujifilm’s more upmarket offerings, their famous high ISO settings are nowhere to be found on the A700, which can only offer a comparatively restricted 100 to 400 ISO sensitivity with no anti-shake.

Unlike most of the A-series range, there’s no optical viewfinder to be found either, with Fuji gambling that punters will prefer the larger 2.4″ 112k colour LCD display.

Annoyingly, the camera sticks with the more obscure xD-Picture Card format, backed up by 12MB of built-in storage, while movie options are pretty limited with a super-juddery maximum frame rate of just 10 frames per second at 320×240 (AVI with audio)

Still, it’s as cheap as chips, retailing at just $199 (£107, €157), ($50 less than its A600 predecessor) and should be in the shops from early October 2006.

Fujifilm FinePix A700 CameraFujifilm FinePix A700 specifications
Image Capture
Sensor Type 1/1.6″ Fujifilm SuperCCD HR, 7.30 megapixels (effective)
Aspect Ratio 4:3, 3:2
Image Dimensions 3072 x 2304, 3264 x 2176, 2304 x 1728, 1600 x 1200, 640 x 480
Image Preview / Review
Viewfinder No
LCD 2.4″, 112,000 pixels
Lens
Lens Type Fujinon
3x optical zoom
Image Stabilization No
Focal Length 8.0 – 24.0mm (actual), 36 – 108mm (35mm equivalent)
Aperture Range Wide: F2.8 / F8, Tele: F5.2 / F14
Focusing System TTL Contrast
Focusing Range Normal: 20″ – infinity (49 cm – infinity)
Macro: 4.1″ – 256″ (10 cm – 628 cm)
Exposure
ISO Sensitivity Auto / ISO 100/200/400
Shutter Speed 2 – 1/1600 second
Metering Modes TTL 64-zones
White Balance Image Sensor – Automatic, Preset (Fine, Shade, Fluorescent light (Daylight), Fluorescent light (Warm White), Fluorescent light (Cool White), Incandescent light)
Internal Flash Modes:
Auto, Red-eye Reduction, Forced Flash, Suppressed Flash, Slow Synchro, Red-eye Reduction + Slow Synchro
Range: 1.6 ft.-12.5 ft. (wide); 2.0 ft. to 6.6 ft. (tele); 1.0 ft. – 2.6 ft. (macro)
Creative Scene Modes: Portrait, Landscape, Sport, Night
Digital Zoom 6.3x
Self Timer Yes, 2 or 10 seconds
Time Lapse No
Movie Format AVI with audio, 320×240 and 160×120, Max. frame-rate: 10 frames per second
Storage
Recording Medium xD Picture Card, Built-in
File Format JPEG (EXIF 2.2)
Connectivity
Video Yes, NTSC / PAL switchable
Computer USB 2.0 Full (LOW) Speed, FireWire
Other DC In
Power
Battery Type Alkaline disposable, NiMH rechargeable
Battery Form Factor 2 x AA
Product Bundle
Software FinePixViewer
Battery / Charger 2 x AA Alkaline disposable battery
Flash Memory 12.0MB built-in memory
Other
Digital Print Order Format (DPOF) compliant Yes
PictBridge Compliant Yes
Internal Microphone Yes
Tripod Mount Yes
Remote Control No
Dimensions 3.7 x 2.4 x 1.2″
94.0 x 61.0 x 30.5mm
Weight 139.0 g/4.9 oz

Fujifilm

Apple iTunes 7 Revamped With Films For US

Apple iTunes 7 Revamped With Films For USiTunes 7 is now available for download. The indexing has been improved, as has navigation by re-organising the Library and other indexes that normally appear on the left hand side. If iTunes is linked to an account on the iTunes store, it can now download artwork for any music on your system. Searching is also easier, as both music and video can be searched by viewing the artwork and then seeing what’s available in say that album.

Gapless play is supported, but iTunes may take a while to index your music library.

Music can now easily be transferred between authorised computers (work and home PC) by plugging in an iPod, sync the iPod at home and when plugged in at work, the content is synced to the work PC FROM the iPod.

The music store now holds movies, these cost $9.99 for library content (i.e. older releases) and $14.99 for new movies (now released on the same day as the DVD release). If pre-ordered or in the 1st week of release, they’re discounted to $12.99. Content is available from Disney, Touchstone, Pixar and Miramax.

Apple iTunes 7 Revamped With Films For US All movie and video content is now stored in 640 x 480 format.

The games available are Tetris, Mahjong and Mini Golf from Electronic Arts, Pac-Man from Namco, Cubis-2 from FlashGames, Bejewelled and Zuma from PopCap and Texas Hold’em and Vortex from Apple, each costs £3.99.

Unfortunately movies and TV shows are still only available in the US, but Apple hope to have them available in the UK in early 2007.

Microsoft Live Search Shuffles Out Of Beta

Microsoft Live Search Shuffles Out Of BetaMicrosoft is officially launching its updated next-gen, ‘Live Search’, search engine today as the company tries hard to catch up with market leaders Google and Yahoo.

Microsoft is currently languishing a distant third behind search engine kings Google, currently hogging a hefty 45 percent of all search engine queries in the US, with Yahoo notching up 29 percent of the market compared to Microsoft’s mere 13 per cent.

From today, Microsoft will start replacing the current MSN Search engine on MSN.com with its new Live Search branded label, which features a souped-up image search service, better local search, a redesigned user interface and new tools for refining query results.

We can’t say we particularly liked the new AJAX-tastic interactive interface – it may well be technically cleverer than Google’s, but we’re fans of keeping it simple, thanks.

Microsoft Live Search Shuffles Out Of BetaIn line with its rivals, Live Search will also feature a new social search service called QnA, where surfers can pose questions and get answers from other users.

There will also be new options to view full-size photos in image search results and more “bird’s eye” aerial images in its local search service (another Microsoft project now shedding its beta label in the US and UK).

Derrick Connell, general manager of the Microsoft search business unit, explained that the new Live Search feature will be implemented progressively across different MSN host servers.

Microsoft Live Search Shuffles Out Of BetaMicrosoft’s new search engine – with its Google-a-like super-simple homepage – has been in public beta testing since March at Live.com, which is also shaking off its beta status this week.

These updates reflect Microsoft’s mustard keenness to grab a juicy slice of the search engine market, with search engine-based advertising proving to be a fast-growing, multi-billion-dollar earner.

Live Search

Sky Broadband DRM Woes Halt Films

Sky Broadband DRM Woes Halt FilmsSky has hit the pause button on delivering films (known by some as movies) and sport via their Sky By Broadband service, due to cracks in Microsoft’s Windows Media DRM software.

Sky has put an announcement on their site,

In order to make an essential update to the Sky by broadband security system, we are sorry that access to all movies and some sports content has been temporarily suspended. This does not affect your computer and content can still be bookmarked for future use. We will keep you posted on progress and apologise for any inconvenience.

Clearly being a big bash for the service, it must be of great embarrassment for all concerned. Content owners from around the world – especially those within the News International family, Fox, etc – will be throwing a dizzy fit, having bought the technologies companies long-lasting pitch that DRM is essential for the survival of the content biz. You see, most of them feel their clients are not to be trusted with the content,that they’re so used to having.

Sky Broadband DRM Woes Halt FilmsBackground
A couple of weeks ago, a little software app called FreeUse4WM appeared, that stripped the Digital Rights Management (DRM) from any content, be that audio or video, held in the Windows Media format.

Following this, Microsoft threw people at fixing the problems – they had to, as it laid bare all of the content that it was supposed to protect. Sitting back with a smug look on their faces (we imagine), they must have choked on their latte’s when version 1.2 of FreeUse4WM came out, cracking the DRM and exposing the content again. It’s understood that Microsoft are working on the fix for v1.2.

Security of all sorts is just a game of cat and mouse, with no absolute guarantees – security company created protection

US Mobile TV Audience Grows 45 Percent: Telephia

US Mobile TV Audience Grows 45 Percent: TelephiaThe mobile TV audience soared 45 percent to 3.7 million subscribers in Q2 2006, according to a new report by telecom and new media researchers, Telephia.

Telephia’s Mobile TV Diary Report says that quarterly mobile TV revenues increased to $86 million last quarter, representing a thumping great increase of 67 percent since Q1.

“Mobile TV is the fastest growing wireless data service and marketers are working quickly to figure out how they can capitalize on what has the potential to be the most important new form of media since the advent of the Internet,” roared Tamara Gaffney, Director of Product Management, Telephia.

Telephia’s figures put ABC News as the most watched mobile TV channel in Q2 2006, notching up a hefty 40 percent share of the total mobile TV audience, followed by The Weather Channel with 32 per cent of the market.

US sports fans keen to keep up to date with results from their one-country World Championships gave Fox Sports and ESPN 31 and 29 percent, respectively.

US Mobile TV Audience Grows 45 Percent: Telephia“News and information is the killer app for mobile television. With just a quick flip of their phone it gives consumers instant gratification,” added Gaffney.

“While still in its nascent stages, mobile TV shows significant and unique promise given the ability of the consumer to shift viewing from location to location,” he continued

Mobile TV Channels Total Audience Share
1. ABC News 40%
2. The Weather Channel 32%
3. Fox Sports 31%
4. ESPN 29%
5. Fox News 22%
6. NBC Mobile News 20%
7. Comedy Central 16%
8. AccuWeather 15%
8. Discovery Kids 15%
10. Discovery Channel 13%
11. CNN 12%
11. E! 12%

Telephia
More details [businesswire.com]

Sony DSC-T5, DSC-N2 Cameras Announced

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T5, DSC-N2 Cameras AnnouncedSony has announced two new cameras shunting off their ever-busy production line, the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T50 and DSC-N2, both offering large LCD screens.

Sony DSC-T50
The DSC-T50 is the new, top-of-the-range addition to Sony’s popular ultra-compact ‘T series’ range and comes with a Carl Zeiss 3x folded optics lens, Super SteadyShot optical image stabilisation, 3.0″ LCD touch screen and a seven megapixel sensor, with high light sensitivity up to IS0 1000.

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T5, DSC-N2 Cameras AnnouncedShipping in (ahem) ‘bold’ red, black and silver, the DSC-T50 offers 56 MB of internal memory (with Memory Stick Duo/ PRO Duo memory cards allowing storage expansion up to 4GB) and sizes up at just 95×56.5×23.4 and 170g.

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T5, DSC-N2 Cameras AnnouncedSony DSC-N2
The DSC-N2 follows on from the DSC-N1 and comes with the same 3.0″ touch-screen LCD and Carl Zeiss Vario Tessar 3x optical zoom lens, finished off in a natty ‘champagne gold’ finish.

The sensor has been ramped up to a beefy ten megapixel /1.8″ CCD with high ISO pushed up to ISO 1600 (compared to 800 on the N1).

The DSC-N2 comes with a built-in slide show feature, allowing you to wow your chums with your holiday snaps forever.

With every picture taken, the camera creates a secondary, VGA resolution image which is stored in a dedicated section of the camera’s internal memory.

These images can then be played back as “in-camera slide shows,” complete with (guffaw) ‘creative’ transition effects like pans, wipes and fades, accompanied by the user’s own soundtrack of “Uno paloma blanca,” if they so desire (Please….no…spare us!)

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T5, DSC-N2 Cameras Announced“With digital photography, the social interaction that happens when people share their pictures has become as important as making great photographs,” insisted Phil Lubell, director of marketing for digital still cameras and photo printers at Sony Electronics.

Both new cameras should be in the shops from next month, with the retailing for around DSC-T50 for $500 (£268, Ä394) and the DSC-N2 for $450 (£241, Ä354).

Sony

WordWeb Review: Free English Thesaurus/Dictionary (90%)

WordWeb Review: Free  English Thesaurus/Dictionary (90%)A long time favourite of the Digi-Lifestyles crew, WordWeb is a free, cut-down version of the WordWeb Pro software, and includes a comprehensive English thesaurus and dictionary with the ability to look up words from within external programs.

Originally an add-on for the Crossword Compiler application, WordWeb has developed into a formidable stand-alone product, regularly updated with new words and senses.

Once installed, the program lurks in your Windows system tray and can be activated from within almost any program.

WordWeb Review: Free  English Thesaurus/Dictionary (90%)Simply highlight the word you need a definition for and either click the system tray icon or use the default keyboard shortcut of CTRL+ALT+W.

Quick as a flash, WordWeb pops up with a dictionary definition of your highlighted word, often supplemented by a sample sentence demonstrating the correct usage of the word.

Minger
Seeing as we haven’t got over our childish habit of typing in naughty words into dictionary, we tried it out with the British slang word, ‘minger:’

1. (slang) a physically undesirable, smelly, or ugly person
“It wasn’t ’til we woke, the next morning, that I realised quite what a minger she was. I left pretty damn sharpish before she asked for my phone”

WordWeb Review: Free  English Thesaurus/Dictionary (90%)The program can also be used to look up word definitions and alternative synonyms or antonyms – you could, for example, look up “tree”, click on the “Types” tab and you’ll be presented with a list of different types of tree.

Click on “Part of” and the program will tell you that a tree can be part of a “forest” or “wood” (in case you weren’t sure).

Clicking on the “Replace” button will let you swap the highlighted word in your document with a listed synonym or you can keep on exploring alternatives by clicking on words to view more synonyms and definitions.

The WordWeb database boasts more than 156,000 root works and 124,000 synonym sets and is based on Princeton’s WordNet project, with the developers making “many thousands of corrections and additions to this base.”

WordWeb Review: Free  English Thesaurus/Dictionary (90%)The program – which comes in regionalised flavours – can also access the web to offer a web search of the highlighted word or link to a site with translation capabilities.

The $19 Pro version adds 6,000 more definitions and offers extra features like wildcard word search, full text definition search, custom glossaries and optional word lists

Notably, the UK-developed WordWeb is also one of the very few references that works with screen reader software for the blind – kudos to the authors.

Features: 85%
Ease of use: 85%
Value For Money: 85% (100% for freebie version!)
Overall: 90%
Free WordWeb 4.5 for Windows 95/98/2000/NT/Me/XP
WordWeb Pro

‘Keeping The Faith’ Pro-Blair Website Comes Unstuck

'Keeping The Faith' Pro-Blair Website Comes UnstuckOne thing the Web is great for is reaching out to a potential audience of millions to garner support for your cause.

Politicians, campaigners and grass roots activists have all been quick to embrace the Internet as a means of furthering their political goals and spreading the message about their mission. This week has seen Tony Blair come under heavy pressure from his own party to resign as leader, with eight junior government members quitting in protest. So what better time for a Labour activist to launch an appeal on the Web to whip up support for poor old beleaguered Tony? Step forward David Taylor who has risen to the challenge and launched a new site called ‘Keeping the faith.’

Opening up with a plea to allow Tony “to get on with the job,” the site claims to represent ‘Labour members, activists and voters backing Tony Blair against a minority of MPs who want to bring him down.”

A page lists “Tony Blair’s top 50 achievements since being elected in 1997,” supported by backslapping quotes from senior Labour figures who are backing ol’ big ears all the way.

'Keeping The Faith' Pro-Blair Website Comes UnstuckTo further promote Tony’s cause the author has invited surfers to sign a petition to register their support, with a form inviting people to enter their name, email address and short comment.

There’s also a link inviting you to see who’s already signed up their support for Blair, and clicking on this takes you to a long list of names.

It starts off well, with regular members of the public adding their names until some wag realised that the site’s author wasn’t monitoring the signatories, neither had he set up email confirmations or IP checking -so people were free to post up as many times as they liked.

Quickly, the petition descended into farce, with characters like “Willo the Wisp”, “o rly?”, “Ming the Merciless” (both ordinary and ‘classic’ versions), “the guy from the picture insurance advert” and “Val Kilmer (in the style of Jim Morrison)” all joining up to support our Tony.

'Keeping The Faith' Pro-Blair Website Comes UnstuckBefore long, posters had worked out how to add pretty colours to their signatures and then moved on to embedding images.

As we went to press the petition was finally taken offline as the pages continued to fill up with daft names and pictures.

The author’s experience should hopefully serve as a lesson to anyone trying to use the web to further their political aims.

Rule one: Online petitions are like naughty children – turn your back on them for a minute and all hell is likely to break loose.

Rule two: If people can mess it up, they will.

Rule three: Like suitcases on tube stations, never, ever, leave an online form unattended.

keepingthefaith.org.uk

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Fresh out of Japan is the new Caplio R5 digital camera, featuring anti-shake, a new 7.24 megapixel CCD and the same mighty 7.1x optical wide zoom lens (28-200mm, 35mm equiv) as seen on its predecessor, the Caplio R4 ( reviewed here in April 2006).

Ricoh are making big claims for the low light capabilities of their new image processing engine, which works with the built in CCD-shift vibration correction method to produce what they describe as, “high quality images at even higher ISO settings with low noise.”

The new model looks very similar to the R4, but there’s been a few changes in the physical layout: the anti-shake on/off button from the top plate has now disappeared into a sub-menu accessible from the LCD interface, with a circular on/off button taking its place.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)We can’t say we liked this move, as the smaller, recessed power button is much harder to operate (we also had issues with powering up the camera, but we’ll move on to that later).

Sneaking around the back
The buttons on the rear of the camera have been shunted around a bit too, with the zoom rocker also getting that shrinking feeling while being moved closer to the LCD screen.

We really can’t work out the thinking behind this move. The new, smaller zoom control is much harder to operate and if you were wearing gloves, zooming would be nigh-on impossible.

The small three-way camera/screen/movie switch also remains as fiddly as with the R4, although Ricoh’s designers have seen fit to move it to the right hand side of the camera.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)LCD screen
There’s still a healthily large 2.5-inch LCD dominating the back of the camera.

This has been ramped up from 150k to 230k pixels although the difference didn’t seem as stunning as we might have hoped.

A quick caveat here: we ended up going into a camera store and asking them to get out a R4 for comparison.

While holding out both cameras pointing at the same scene we have to say there didn’t seem a huge amount of difference – sure, the R5 seemed a bit smoother, but none of the waiting customers managed to guess which screen was the newer one.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Seeing as the assistant was most unimpressed with our antics we had to cut short our testing, so we can only assume that the differences would manifest themselves under more demanding light conditions or under closer scrutiny.

With all those extra pixels, the screen has to be better so maybe we were all on drugs or something.

Daytime shooting
Like Dracula in reverse, this camera works best when the sun is in the sky.

Taking the R5 out for a stroll around London, we were pleased by its fast power-up times and were constantly reminded of the benefits of having a compact with a proper wide-angle zoom range.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)The LCD screen was easy to read (although, being London in September, the sun wasn’t exactly blinding), but we would have liked to have seen an optical viewfinder in there too.

Although suffering from a rather noisy zooming mechanism, the R5 took crisp and pleasing daytime shots, with exposure generally spot on and images exposed at 64 and 100 ISO showing very little noise.

The banding issues that plagued the R4 were also noticeable by their absence too.

The new 640 x 480/30fps movie mode was fun, and produced some smooth clips, although the juddery digital zoom is best left alone (like most digicams, the optical zoom is deactivated when shooting in movie mode).

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Night time woes
We were disappointed with the camera’s night time performance.

Purely in the interests of ensuring a full test, we took the camera out to a Brixton club and grabbed the kind of pics that your average punter might take on a night out.

These included a few snaps of the band, pictures of friends looking a little worse for wear, the inevitable drunk ‘group shot’ and some grabbed shots from around the club.

Throughout the night, the Ricoh would sometimes struggle to get a fix in low light conditions, and on a few occasions the entire thing froze up or wouldn’t turn on. Taking the battery out and putting it back in seemed to fix the problem, at the expense of a few missed shots.

Even when the camera was working perfectly, some shots were ruined because of Ricoh’s crazy placement of the flash gun -for many right-handers, their middle finger will naturally fall right in front of the flash. End result: under-exposed shots.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Noisy nights
Noise at 400ISO actually seemed worse than with the R4 and when we remembered to move our fingers out of the way of the flash, the results weren’t too flattering.

The none-too-impressive f3.3 maximum aperture meant that the camera was always reaching up to the higher ISO settings, and the higher the sensitivity, the grainier things got.

Although it was handy to have full resolution ISO 1600 sensitivity, the results fell woefully short of the quality of similarly-priced rivals like the Fujifilm FinePix F30 (although that camera has a greatly reduced zoom range).

Running the photos through noise reduction software like Noise Ninja vastly improved things – perhaps enough to just get away with a 10″ x 8″ print – but we really can’t recommend the R5 for night hawks.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Street photographers looking to grab late night sneaky shots with the camera on 10 second self timer will have to think again too as the flash – yes the FLASH! – blinks brightly on and off during the countdown!

It’s like saying, “Yoo-hoo! Muggers! Over here! Look at me!” and despite scouring the manual we couldn’t find a way of turning it off.

It’s one of the daftest things we’ve seen on a modern camera.

Manual focus
One thing we really like about the Ricoh R5 (and the Ricoh GR) is its manual focus abilities -a rare treat on a mid price camera.

The ‘snap’ mode – in particular – is fabulous for grabbing quick shots but annoyingly Ricoh still haven’t fixed the problem that results in the flash completely overexposing subjects close to the camera.

Sort it out Ricoh – it does the same thing on our upmarket Ricoh GR and we expect better for the money.

Download example files (Three images, ZIP format, 7.5MB)

Interface
We’ve always liked Ricoh’s clear, no-nonsense interface and had no complaints with what we found on the R5, although saving files to the camera’s internal memory was very slow.

Switching to a Fujifilm 2GB SD card sped things up considerably.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%) We had some problems with that the SD slot, with a worrying ‘card format’ error popping up unexpectedly halfway through a shoot.

We would have been most unchuffed to have lost all the photos we’d taken, but turning the camera off a few times seemed to solve the problem. Had we bought the camera, this would have been enough to have sent us hot footing it back to the camera store demanding a refund.

As with the R4, the camera is firmly pointed at the point and shoot camera brigade with very little in the way of advanced options for photographers who like to fiddle about with exposure settings.

Despite its mass market aspirations, the camera still doesn’t have too many consumer-friendly scene modes compared to their rivals – a serious omission in our book.

Conclusion
On the face of it, the Caplio R5 offers a lot for the casual snapper, serving up a generous 7 megapixel sensor, built-in anti shake and an impressively wide angle zoom in a suitably bijou package.

The price is right too, set at a highly affordable £250 ($443, €361), placing it smack bang in the middle of a highly competitive price sector.

With its impressive 28mm-200mm lens, there’s a lot to like about the R5, and anyone prepared to work with the camera could eek out some high quality shots, although consumers looking for an easy-peasy, point’n’shooter might be frustrated with the camera’s poor low light performance.

After encountering so many problems during the review, we’re finding it hard to recommend the R5 outright, although our previous positive experiences with Ricoh products make us inclined to put the glitches down to early production teething problems. Let’s hope we’re right.

We still can’t see enough here to encourage R4 owners that it’s worth the upgrade, but the combination of the mighty lens, great daytime pictures and the small form factor may prove an irresistible attraction to some consumers.

We just hope they buy their new R5 from a company with a good returns policy, just in case.

Rating
Ease of use: 80%
Picture quality: 65%
Features: 80%
Value for money: 75%
Overall: 70%

Ricoh Caplio R5 specifications
Sensor 1/2.5″ Type CCD
7.24 million effective pixels
Image sizes
3072 x 2304
3072 x 2048
2592 x 1944
2048 x 1536
1280 x 960
640 x 480
Movie clips
640 x 480 @ 15/30fps
320 x 240 @ 15/30fps
160 x 120 @ 15/30fps
WAV sound
File formats
JPEG Exif v2.2
DPOF
DCF compliant
AVI (Open DML Motion JPEG)
Lens
28-200mm (35mm equiv)
F3.3-4.8
7.1x zoom
Image stabilization
CCD-shift Vibration correction
Conversion lenses: No
Digital zoom up to 3.6x
Focus
Auto Focus
Manual Focus
Snap
Infinity
Focus distance
Normal: 0.3 m – infinity (Wide) 1.0 m – infinity (Tele)
Macro: 0.01 m – infinity (Wide), 0.14 m – infinity (Tele)
Metering
TTL-CCD Metering Method: Multi (256 segments)
Center weighted
Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Spot
ISO sensitivity
AUTO
ISO 64
ISO 100
ISO 200
ISO 400
ISO 800
ISO 1600
Exposure compensation
+/-2EV in 1/3EV steps
Exposure bracketing
-0.5EV, +/-0, +0.5EV
Shutter speed
8, 4, 2, 1 – 1/2000 sec
Aperture
F3.3-4.8
Modes
Still
Continuous
S-Continuous
M-Continuous
Scene modes
Portrait
Sports
Landscape
Nightscape
Skew correction
Text
Zoom Macro
High Sensitivity
My Setting 1 and 2
White balance
Auto
Fixed (Outdoors, Cloudy, Incandescent Lamp, Incandescent Lamp2, Fluorescent Lamp, Manual settings)
White balance fine tune
White Balance Bracket
Self timer
2 or 10 sec
Continuous shooting
2.8fps
Flash
Flash Off , Auto, Red-Eye Flash, Flash on, Flash Synch
Range: approx. 0.2 m-2.4 m (Wide) approx. 0.14 m-1.8 m (Tele)
LCD monitor
2.5-inch Transparent Amorphous Silicon TFT LCD
230,000 pixels
Connectivity
USB 2.0 High Speed
AV out
NTSC/PAL switchable
Storage 26MB internal memory
SD/MMC card compatible
Power
Rechargeable battery DB-60
AC adapter
Weight (no batt)
140 g
Dimensions 96 x 55 x 26 mm )

TreoCiel Weather Forecast For Palm Treo Review (90%)

TréoCiel Weather Forecast For Palm Treo Review (90%)Like most Brits we’re more than a bit obsessed with all things weather-related, so as soon as we bought a Palm Treo we were busily installing a host of weather-related applications, including Treo Alarm.

We thought that combo had left us most with isobaric bases covered until we came across the uncrowned Big Daddy of weather apps, the superb Tréociel.

This puppy positively assails you with weather info, serving up max and min temperatures, precipitation probabilities, weather forecast icons and wind speed and direction.

Of course, all that data’s a fat load of good if you can’t make head or tail of it, but here’s where the Tréociel really excels, presenting weather forecasts in a series of clear, easy-to-read scrollable charts.

TréoCiel Weather Forecast For Palm Treo Review (90%)Setting it all up
Before you start, you need to input which cities you want to monitor, and this can be done by typing in the city name, weather station ID or search.

Once located, the program prompts you to decide whether you want to track hourly or daily weather data, with a click on the ‘update’ button downloading the latest information off the internet (unfortunately, there’s no auto-update facility yet).

Reading the charts
Downloaded ten-day weather information is shown on a horizontally scrolling graph which can be set up with customised views.

By default, Tréociel will show min/max temperature, weather icons, wind speed and precipitation information, with the option to define three custom views.

TréoCiel Weather Forecast For Palm Treo Review (90%)Wind speeds can be shown in km/h, mph, m/s, knots or in the trusty old Beaufort Scale, with the choice to select temperature readouts in Celsius or old school Fahrenheit.

Graphs can display hourly or daily forecasts, with the scrollable graph making it easy to track weather trends.

Conclusion
We loved Tréociel, with the program’s novel and easy to read interface tempting us into wasting endless time checking out the weather in different cities around the world, as well as looking up the local forecast.

The internet updates meant we knew when to pack an umbrella before leavng the office and if anyone made the mistake of striking up a conversation about the weather, we had Tréociel on hand to bore them utterly senseless.

TréoCiel Weather Forecast For Palm Treo Review (90%)At just €9.95 the program represents great value to our eyes and looks to be an essential purchase for travellers and meteorological mullers.

Currently optimised for the Palm Treo only, owners of non Palm smartphones should be able to join in the fun soon with the authors promising versions for “Windows Mobile and other platforms” in the future.

Features: 80%
Ease of use: 85%
Value For Money: 90%
Overall: 90%

TréoCiel