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EasyShare LS743 Zoom Digital Camera

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Product summary

The good: Solid image quality; easy operation; excellent burst mode; outstanding battery life.

The bad: No manual exposure/focus controls; no TIFF/raw options; no diopter adjustment; memory card not included.

The bottom line: Clean design, fast operation, and a great burst mode are the hallmarks of this 4-megapixel shooter for the point-and-click crowd.

Specifications: Resolution: 4 megapixels ; Optical zoom: 2.8 x ; Display type: 1.8 in LCD display ; See full specs

Price range: $399.99 check prices

See all products in the Kodak EasyShare LS series

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 01/13/2005
  • Released on: 06/15/2004
Snapshooters who want good image quality and ease of operation and won't miss manual controls will love the Kodak EasyShare LS743, a slim and totable 4-megapixel model. While its zoom range is limited to 2.8X, close focusing, a good burst mode, and extralong battery life make this a versatile camera, especially for photographers whose enthusiasm for picture-taking exceeds their technical skills.The panorama layout of its 4.3-by-1.2-by-1.9-inch all-metal body lets the 6.5-ounce Kodak EasyShare LS743 slip easily into the narrowest of pockets, but its wide shape and the placement of the shutter release and zoom controls make it awkward to use this camera one-handed. For best balance, brace the left side of the LS743 with one hand, place your right index finger over the top onto the shutter release, and let your right thumb find the zoom toggle on the back panel. Those with large hands may find the mandated grip a bit awkward.


The Kodak puts the flash-control button on top of the camera, along with a wheel that lets you cycle through shooting modes.

Top-mounted controls include a power-on button illuminated by a blue LED that's bright enough to read by, a flash-mode key, and a rotating wheel that cycles through the main shooting modes, which are displayed on the back panel. When the icon for the mode you want (Auto, Portrait, Close-Up, Scenes, Video, or Favorite Review) is illuminated, you press the jog wheel to activate it. Selecting Scenes produces an LCD menu of choices such as Night or Sport. Because the mode indicators are each illuminated by a flashing red LED and described on the LCD, it's easy to choose these settings under the dimmest ambient illumination.


The four-way controller lets you navigate menus and operate the zoom.

The back panel is clean and well laid out. The 1.8-inch LCD is centered and flanked on the left by Delete, Menu, Review, and Share buttons and on the right by a four-way controller pad that rocks up, down, left, and right to navigate menus or controls and is depressed to activate a selection. The zoom toggle is concentric with the four-way button.


The icons to the right of the LCD panel illuminate when you cycle through shooting modes with the jog dial on top of the camera.

Shooting options other than flash mode require a trip to the well-designed menu system, where you can make adjustments to exposure compensation, white balance, ISO setting, focus zone, and metering mode. You'll also find the burst mode and self-timer there. Unfortunately, most settings other than picture quality return to their defaults once you turn off the camera. A second menu layer invokes a setup menu for more permanent settings, such as picture review, sound volume, and date stamps.

The upper-left corner of the back panel includes the optical viewfinder and a "ready" LED that turns green when autofocus and exposure are set and flashes when an image is being stored.


Unless you plan to shoot no more than 10 shots at a time at full resolution, you'll want to upgrade the LS743's internal 16MB of memory with an SD/MMC card.

Although the Kodak EasyShare LS743 sports a 2.8X zoom lens instead of the more common 3X type, you probably won't notice the difference. The 36mm (35mm-film-camera equivalent) wide-angle view is broad enough for most indoor shooting, and the 100mm (equivalent) telephoto setting actually shaves just 8mm from what you'd get with a full 3X magnification. The Schneider-Kreuznach C-Variogon lens name lends some cachet and nostalgia for film-camera veterans but, more importantly, focuses down to 2 inches at the wide-angle setting in macro mode and 12 inches at full telephoto.

While there are no manual exposure settings other than exposure compensation to plus or minus 2EV in 1/2EV steps, you can customize how the camera makes its decisions by selecting multipattern, center-weighted, or spot metering, as well as multizone or center-zone TTL autofocus. You can also choose from three white-balance settings and set ISO from 80 to 800. (The camera uses only ISO 80 to 160 in automatic ISO mode.) Shutter speeds up to 1/1,400 second are selected by the camera, and there's also a Long Time exposure option that specifies exposures from 0.5 to 16 seconds.

The nine scene modes (Night, Night Portrait, Sport, Landscape, Snow, Beach, Party, Self Portrait, and Museum) do a good job of optimizing shutter speed and aperture for specific types of shooting. The Sports setting is particularly fun to use when coupled with the camera's 3-frame-per-second, 6-shot burst mode. There's also the increasingly common automatic picture-rotation feature that orients your vertical and horizontal shots correctly for display.

One cool feature is the Share button, which lets you slot pictures into an in-camera photo album for viewing as a "favorites" or tag them for printing. You can also share your pictures with as many as 32 e-mail addresses, marking them in the camera, then sending the shots automatically when downloaded from the camera to your computer's EasyShare software. While reviewing or tagging pictures, you can magnify the images up to 4X on the LCD.

Flash options are rather basic, with only automatic, fill (always on), red-eye, and off available, and flash range is limited to about 10 feet at the wide-angle setting and a mere 6 feet in telephoto mode.

Movie shooters will find the LS743 a poor substitute for a camcorder, with 640x480 clips captured at a jerky 13fps. The length of your movies is limited only by available memory; a 512MB SD card can record more than half an hour of sound and motion.


We got an excellent 854 pictures from a single charge of the lithium-ion battery (half with flash), even with frequent picture review and zooming.

Photographers who like to snap off consecutive shots quickly will be pleased with the Kodak EasyShare LS743's performance. If an unexpected photo opportunity pops up, this camera is good to go, whether you're reviewing photos on the LCD, making an adjustment in a menu, or simply not paying attention. If the camera's on, just bring it to your eye and click away. After the first shot, you can take additional pictures every 1.8 seconds (2.5 seconds using the flash). Or you can switch to burst mode and crank off 6 pictures in less than 2 seconds.

Unfortunately, if the camera is not on already, you'll have to wait about 6 seconds for it to wake up. Shutter lag was decent at 0.7 second under high-contrast lighting conditions but quite long under low-contrast lighting, where the nonassisted autofocus thrashed around for 1.7 seconds before locking in.

Kodak touts its "indoor/outdoor" LCD, and it was usable as a viewfinder outdoors, even under direct sunlight. Because the LCD shows 100 percent of the picture, it's a better choice for close-ups than the small, non-parallax-corrected optical viewfinder, which displays only 80 percent of the image and doesn't have diopter adjustment.

Purple fringing that showed up around the highlights of many of our pictures was the most glaring defect to mar the otherwise good image quality produced by the Kodak EasyShare LS743. Pictures were generally sharp and detailed. Colors, especially flesh tones, were realistic in most cases, although some tended to have, if anything, a bit too much saturation. We detected a slight blue cast in some photos, and although exposures were generally good, there was a tendency for some highlights to blow out. Noise was not a problem at lower ISO settings but reared its ugly head at ISO 400 to 800. The highest sensitivity setting is available only at the lowest-resolution Good setting, so you probably won't be using it much, anyway.
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Reviews from around the WebPowered by alaTest

  • alaTest.com

    Editors' rating: 85

    Summary: alaTest has collected and analyzed 248 reviews of Kodak EasyShare LS743 from international magazines and websites. Experts rate this product 72/100 and users 86/100. Comparing these reviews to 488389 other Digital Compact Cameras reviews gives this product an overall alaScore™ 85/100 = Very Good.

  • newbie.org

    Editors' rating: 100

    Read full review

  • dpexpert.com.au

    Editors' rating: 70

    Summary: : Small may be beautiful, but there is a point at which miniaturisation starts to defeat useability. These two cameras are on the borderline. The optical viewfinder is too small and awkwardly placed on the very end of the camera body.

    Read full review

  • dcresource.com

    Summary: When it's time to recharge the battery, just pop it into the included external charger. Expect a three hour wait while the battery is charged. This isn't just one of those "plug in right into the wall" chargers -- you can swap plugs too, allowing you ...

    Read full review

  • pcmag.com

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: The Kodak LS743 is takes extremely crisp, sharp pictures, sharper than many cameras with a higher MP rating. It's slow to start and not the sexiest camera we've seen, but it's easy to use and gives you great return on your money.

    Read full review

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