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As does its sibling, the Coolpix 2200 has a 3.5-by-2.6-by-1.5-inch, 7-ounce silver-tone plastic body that is able to make the most out of a minimum number of controls, because manual settings are few and far between. The four-way cursor pad handles most adjustments, including flash options, macro mode, and the self-timer. The only fine-tuning control an ambitious snapshooter is likely to need is the exposure compensation, which is available with other picture-taking and camera options through a well-organized system of menus. There are also 15 useful scene modes, including Sports, Fireworks, Backlighting, Portraits, and Beach/Snow.
The Coolpix 2200 has one fewer resolution setting than its stablemate, offering 1,600x1,200, 1,024x768, and 640x480 pixels, and only two compression options: High and Normal, in 1,600x1,200 resolution only. This camera's 3X zoom lens is a little wider (in 35mm-camera-equivalent terms) at 36mm, compared with 38mm for the 3200, and a little shorter--108mm maximum zoom vs. 115mm. The junior Coolpix's lens is also a little faster but not enough to make a big improvement in low light, with two stops available of f/2.6 and f/5.2 (compared to f/2.8 and f/5.6 for the 3200). Both cameras will take you as close as 1.6 inches in macro mode.
As with its 3.2-megapixel counterpart, the Coolpix 2200's performance is in the middle of the pack. Wake-up time is 3.82 seconds (actually better than the 3200's), but shot-to-shot time without flash is almost twice as long at 2.8 seconds. With flash, we had to wait almost 6 seconds between shots. Burst mode is nothing special, as the 2200 is capable of only three shots in about 1.5 seconds at full resolution, and about 35 photos in 21 seconds at 640x480 pixels.