Fujifilm FinePix A600

CNET Editors' Rating

3.0 stars
    Overall score: 6.2 (3.0 stars)

Good

Average User Rating

8 reviews

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Fujifilm FinePix A600 - top Fujifilm FinePix A600 - sides Fujifilm FinePix A600 - back
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  • Fujifilm FinePix A600 - top
  • Fujifilm FinePix A600 - sides
  • Fujifilm FinePix A600 - back

CNET Editors' Review

CNET Editors' Rating

3.0 stars Good
    Overall score: 6.2 (3.0 stars)
  • Design: 6.0
  • Features: 6.0
  • Performance: 6.0
  • Image quality: 7.0
  • Reviewed by: Will Greenwald
  • Released on:
  • Reviewed on:

The good: Responsive; decent photos.

The bad: Stiff, awkward controls; very few features.

The bottom line: The Fujifilm FinePix A600 produces nice images, though its awkward design and mundane features hold it back.

Review: The Fujifilm FinePix A600 doesn't do much, and it isn't very pretty, but this shooter does deliver decent photos for less than $200. Some might call it the archetypal budget snapshot camera--a clunky, six-megapixel point-and-shoot with a cookie-cutter feature set.

The A600's blocky body manages to be both unimpressive and awkward to use. A stiff zoom rocker and the two buttons on either side of it are the camera's primary controls. Besides zooming and activating flash/macro, the buttons serve as an uncomfortable control pad for navigating the A600's sparse menu system. The rocker is

... Expand full review
The Fujifilm FinePix A600 doesn't do much, and it isn't very pretty, but this shooter does deliver decent photos for less than $200. Some might call it the archetypal budget snapshot camera--a clunky, six-megapixel point-and-shoot with a cookie-cutter feature set.

The A600's blocky body manages to be both unimpressive and awkward to use. A stiff zoom rocker and the two buttons on either side of it are the camera's primary controls. Besides zooming and activating flash/macro, the buttons serve as an uncomfortable control pad for navigating the A600's sparse menu system. The rocker is located in the top-right corner of the camera's back panel, while the actual Menu/OK and Back buttons sit in the lower right, making the simplest activities a thumb-stretching chore.

As a budget point-and-shoot, the A600's features don't exactly stand out. The 6-megapixel Fujifilm SuperCCD sensor is complemented by a mundane 36m-to-108mm-equivalent lens. It lacks image stabilization, so the most you can do for low-light or high-speed shooting is turn on the flash and bump the sensitivity up to its maximum of ISO 400. The camera includes an anemic video mode that records QVGA (320 x 240) footage at 10fps, little better than most camera phones' video modes. It also includes 12MB of internal memory for shooting without an xD memory card. However, 12MB will get you only seven full-resolution shots at best, so a memory card is still highly recommended.

Despite its low-end status, the A600 displayed decent performance. After taking 2.7 seconds from power-on to first shot, we managed to take a shot every 3.1 seconds thereafter without flash. With the onboard flash enabled, that time increased to a more disappointing 5.8 seconds. The shutter release responded quickly, lagging only 0.7 second between button-press and shot. The camera's burst mode could handle only three shots at a time, but it managed to take those shots in just 2.2 seconds, for a rate of 1.4fps.

The A600's images turned out well, though they were hardly perfect. Fine details in our test shots were softened by numerous compression artifacts and heavy fringing on the edges of bright white objects. Despite these flaws, the photos looked good, with even exposure and accurately reproduced colors.

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Average User Rating

3.5 stars out of 8 user reviews

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star: 3
  • 4 star: 3
  • 3 star: 1
  • 2 star: 1
  • 1 star: 0

My Rating

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Most recent user reviews

Showing 3 of 8 reviews

3.5 stars

"Good, but not great" By Mydnight

Pros: This camera does take nice photos most of the time. I've used mine for 3 years and have gotten a ton of beautiful shots out of it.

Cons: Photo to photo is horribly slow. I go to a lot of concerts and trying to snap continuously is a chore and I miss a lot of moments because of that. Poor lighting gives poor photos as the flash is pretty weak too. Hardly any options and settings.

Summary: Overall, I don't regret buying this camera. It's served it's purpose and I've been pleased with it more often than not. Another con is the video mode. It only records 1 minute of video at a time and you can't zoom during the recording (you ... Expand full review

2.5 stars

"Chunky and fiddly with good picture resolution although slow picture taking" By clckn2000

Pros: Easy point and shoot with clear display.

Cons: The menu seem to go on forever. Slow to respond to shutter

Summary: This is a budget camera. Most controls are within a menu somewhere and changes need digging out. The one I have was left useless when a tiny piece of plastic broke off the battery cover. The rest of the day went pictureless.
The camera will not charge the batteries and
... Expand full review

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Specifications

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Quick Specs

  • Digital camera type: Compact
  • Product Type: Digital camera - Compact
  • Resolution: 6.3 megapixels

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