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Casio Exilim EX-Z55 review

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Average User Rating

4.0 stars 38 user reviews

The good: Large, bright LCD screen; outstanding battery life; intelligent and eye-catching design; solid indoor photo quality.

The bad: Poor outdoor photo quality; no burst mode; few manual features.

The bottom line: A great-looking 5-megapixel point-and-shoot with a big screen and so-so photo quality.

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At some point, you have to figure that the dominant digital photography trends of smaller cameras, bigger LCD screens, and more megapixels will reach a critical point, and we'll be left with some sort of tiny 12-megapixel monocle. Until that day arrives, we'll have to settle for models such as Casio's 5-megapixel Exilim EX-Z55 digital camera, a highly portable snapshot camera with a 2.5-inch LCD that's as bright as it is large. Though the Z55's lack of manual features and poor outdoor imaging can be frustrating at times, the camera delivers pleasing indoor results and acceptable shot-to-shot performance.

The centerpiece of the Z55's design is its 2.5-inch LCD screen, which takes up most of the small camera's back and, thus, seems even bigger. Also contributing to this effect is the Z55's comically small and essentially useless optical viewfinder, which works only passably well during daylight and will temporarily blind you at night if you try it with the LCD turned on. Casio crams all of the buttons on the 5.6-ounce Exilim Z55 to the right of Screenzilla but organizes them logically despite their cramped layout. Though the camera lacks ports to charge the battery and download photos directly, the included dock accomplishes both tasks seamlessly.

The Casio Exilim EX-Z55's 3X optical zoom works well, although you're limited to six stops from its widest angle of 35mm to its 105mm telephoto (35mm equivalents). The camera's lens is small enough to keep the camera looking sleek but protrudes enough to keep you from inadvertently taking 10 shots of your own finger. We like Casio's novel memory menu, which enables you to instruct the Z55 to remember the camera's current settings--zoom length, color and ISO settings, white balance, and flash modes--even after you've turned it off. This feature will benefit anyone who chooses to use the Z55 with a tripod, as you'll be able to compose your shots, then take a break without losing battery power. Speaking of the Z55's battery, it's phenomenal: we took more than 1,000 photos, 50 percent with flash, without needing to recharge.

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Quick Specifications

  • Release date08/6/04
  • Digital camera type Ultracompact
  • Resolution 5.0 megapixels
  • Lens System 3.0 x x Zoom lens - 5.8 mm - 17.4 mm - F/2.6-4.8
  • Optical sensor size 1/2.5"
  • Optical sensor type CCD
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