• On GameFAQs: The top 10 strangest game bosses
advertisement

Kodak EasyShare P880

camera on top sides back

Product summary

The good: Very wide (for digital) 24mm lens; user-friendly and comfortable SLR-like body design; solid shooting speed in JPEG format.

The bad: Photo quality unacceptable for an advanced amateur camera; raw implementation close to useless; slow shooter when using uncompressed file modes.

The bottom line: The Kodak EasyShare P880 is a user-friendly camera with a wide-angle lens and pedestrian photo quality that will either please or frustrate users, depending upon their needs.

Specifications: Resolution: 8 megapixels ; Optical zoom: 5.8 x ; Display type: 2.5 in LCD display See full specs

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 12/20/2005
  • Released on: 08/09/2005
Cameras made for advanced amateurs are often tuned for capturing high-quality images quickly and easily, and they're stripped of extraneous gimmicks, such as an overabundance of scene modes. The 8-megapixel Kodak EasyShare P880, at the top of the company's flagship Performance Series, offers a wide-angle zoom lens, as well as design elements, features, and specs that place the camera in that category but delivers them in an uneven and frequently disappointing implementation.The Kodak EasyShare P880 is a well-designed and easy-to-use camera, loaded with dedicated buttons and relying on its simple menu system as little as possible. The all-black camera, with its big hand grip and its 5.8X zoom lens, is easy to hold steady and very comfortable for those with bigger hands. Its large 2.5-inch LCD and electronic viewfinder (EVF) provide a lot of information while shooting, but both are too grainy for manual focusing and refresh too slowly. Though the dSLR-like camera is too big to throw into a purse or even a coat pocket, it is well balanced and feels lightweight despite its one-pound-plus physique, making it a pleasure to hold for long periods of time.

Dedicated buttons abound in this big camera, suiting it for quick operation. With a single touch, a user can directly access drive mode, white balance, ISO sensitivity, metering mode, flash type, focus type, image info, programmable AE/AF lock, and image playback. There is also a customizable Program button for direct access to a menu item of choice, as well as Kodak's signature Share button for printing or transferring using the company's EasyShare system of software and printers.

In keeping with the SLR theme, the Kodak EasyShare P880's lens, which takes standard accessory filters, can be zoomed manually. This is a huge improvement over electronically controlled zooms, as it works as fast as you can twist the ring, doesn't use any battery power, and operates while shooting a movie clip. There is also a manual focus ring, but unlike the zoom, it is not mechanically mated to the lens; instead, it is a fly-by-wire ring that controls the lens elements electronically.The Kodak EasyShare P880 is loaded with standout features that would make any advanced amateur happy. The most important is its 24mm-to-140mm (35mm-film equivalent) f/2.8-to-f/4.1 lens, which is as wide-angle as you can find in a fixed-lens digital camera. The lens's maximum aperture, while average at the wide end, is a bit small at the long end.

Other advanced features that even pros would appreciate include a hotshoe for an external flash (Kodak makes one for this camera) as well as a sync terminal for studio flashes--a feature that some entry-level digital SLRs lack. The two can be used simultaneously for creative lighting setups. While the camera supports rear-curtain flash, which is handy for taking shots with light trails behind moving objects, the lens hood must be removed before using the on-camera flash because it casts a strong shadow across the bottom of an image.

While it doesn't hold many full-resolution shots, the EasyShare P880 has 30MB of internal memory; users should get a big SD card along with the camera, as it doesn't come with one. While top-quality 8-megapixel JPEGs are 4MB to 5MB in this camera, RAW files are about 13MB, and uncompressed TIFFs are a whopping 24MB each.

Processing a raw file is difficult at best. The included software can't do it without a large upgrade downloaded from the Kodak Web site; the only out-of-the-box solution is to process raw files in-camera, a slow and tedious operation. The resulting output is produced on the fly during transfer to a PC. While Kodak's upgraded EasyShare software makes this easier, raw conversion is not compatible on Macs.

The camera has a standard ISO range of 50 to 400, with ISO 800 and 1,600 available at the 0.8-megapixel size. Besides the standard program, aperture-priority, shutter-priority, and manual exposure modes, there are also eight scene modes, as well as a 30fps VGA movie mode. In addition to the typical white-balance modes, there are an open shade, sunset, and three custom settings.

You can make a limited number of image-property adjustments; there are natural, high-, and low-color modes, as well as black and white and sepia. Sharpness and contrast can be adjusted as well.The Kodak EasyShare P880 is a mixed bag when it comes to shooting speed; while it is a relatively quick performer in JPEG mode, it is excruciatingly slow in raw and TIFF modes.

With no electronic zoom lens to rack out at start-up, the camera can capture its first frame after only 2.3 seconds. While a mere 1.8 seconds pass between two JPEGs taken successively and 3.3 seconds when using flash, 18.1 seconds must pass between raw files; an epoch of 30.1 seconds must pass between those big TIFFs. Processing a raw file takes 30 seconds per frame.

The EasyShare P880 has very respectable continuous-shooting rates, at 1.4fps at full resolution and a fast 5.1fps at the lowest resolution, though the buffer runs out after 40 frames. Shutter lag is also very respectable in optimal lighting--0.6 second--though a more middling 1.2 seconds in low-contrast conditions.

Shooting performance in seconds
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Shutter lag (bright)  
Shutter lag (dim)  
Wake-up time  
Fujifilm FinePix S9000
0.5 
0.9 
1.6 
Kodak EasyShare P880
0.6 
1.2 
2.3 
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30
0.8 
0.9 
1.7 
Konica Minolta Dimage A200
0.8 
1.5 
3.5 
Canon PowerShot Pro1
1.1 
1.9 
4.1 

Shooting performance in seconds
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Shot-to-shot time (typical)  
Flash shot-to-shot time  
Raw shot-to-shot time  
Fujifilm FinePix S9000
1.7 
5.3 
18.4 
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30
1.8 
2.2 
6.3 
Kodak EasyShare P880
1.8 
3.3 
18.1 
Canon PowerShot Pro1
2.0 
2.0 
3.0 
Konica Minolta Dimage A200
2.1 
2.4 
4.7 

High-resolution burst performance in frames per second
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Photo quality is also mixed with the Kodak EasyShare P880. The camera's images are good enough for snapshots, but close inspection reveals numerous flaws that discriminating enthusiasts would find unacceptable.

While the lens-sensor combination yields sharp images with warm color rendition, the camera has a tendency to underexpose many shots, especially those with tricky backlighting. In many other situations in which the exposure seems fine, the highlights blow out very easily, giving frames the tonally limited look of a camcorder.

While pictures look very clean at ISO 50, starting at ISO 100, we spotted the yellow, marbleized pattern that typifies poor demosaicing, a postprocessing artifact. And noise becomes obtrusive at ISO 200. Surprisingly, ISO 800 and 1,600 don't seem to be as noisy, but that may be because those frames are no bigger than 0.8 megapixel.

As for lens characteristics, the EasyShare P880 exhibits strong vignetting--darkening of corners--at the 24mm wide angle, even at the smallest aperture of f/8, where this problem is usually eradicated. We even noticed some at the longest focal length with a wide-open aperture. Unsurprisingly, there is also a lot of barrel distortion at this focal length, making straight lines curve outward at the edges of a frame. But it's especially bad in this model because it's asymmetrical and it's throughout the entire frame, not just the edges. Pincushion distortion, the curving in of straight lines at telephoto length, is practically nonexistent. Chromatic aberration, the purple or green fringing around backlit objects, showed up where we expected it but wasn't too extreme.

There are some other noticeable processing flaws that also reveal themselves upon close inspection. Strong white or black halos appear along most high-contrast edges, suggesting a crude sharpening algorithm, and diagonal lines are often jaggy when viewed at 100 percent. Unfortunately, shooting in TIFF or even raw format doesn't remedy these problems in any significant way.
See more CNET content tagged:
Eastman Kodak Co.,
Kodak EasyShare,
lens,
camera

User reviews

Submit your review

Log in or create an account to submit your review for:

Kodak EasyShare P880

ORLog in with your Facebook account
1. Rate this product:
(Mouse over the stars to rate this product and click to set your rating.)
2. One-line summary:(Summarize your review in one line. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 55 characters
3. Pros:(Tell us what you like about this product. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 250 characters
4. Cons:(Tell us what you don't like about this product. 10 characters minimum; required.)
0 of 250 characters
Bottom-line summary:(Explain to us in detail why you like or dislike the product, focusing your comments on the product's features and functionality, and your experience using the product. This field is optional.)
0 of 5000 characters

The posting of advertisements, profanity, or personal attacks are prohibited.
Click here to review our site terms of use.

Submit

Similar products

Where to buy Kodak EasyShare P880

This product is currently not in stock at any of our online merchants.

Find from our auction partner, eBay

Email me when this product is available

Special sponsor stores

advertisement
advertisement

Reviews from around the WebPowered by alaTest

  • Summary: alaTest has collected and analyzed 419 reviews of Kodak EasyShare P880 from international magazines and websites. Experts rate this product 72/100 and users 85/100. Comparing these reviews to 487279 other Digital Compact Cameras reviews gives this product an overall alaScore™ 88/100 = Very Good.

  • maclife.com

    Editors' rating: 60

    Summary: . The P880 does what it's supposed to do. If you can work within the constraints it places on the photographer, you'll find plenty of good features for a fairly decent price.

    Read full review

  • dpreview.com

    Summary: The two cameras in the new EasyShare 'P' range are superficially very similar, yet in many respects they are like chalk and cheese.

    Read full review

  • digitalcamerareview.com

    Summary: Forecasters predict that Americans will buy more than 20,000,000 digital cameras in 2005. Kodak's product development and camera design staff should receive some serious kudos for making it easier than ever for amateur photographers to shoot like ...

    Read full review

  • dcresource.com

    Summary: The P880 posts above average battery life numbers, with only the Olympus and Sony ahead of it. Unfortunately, battery life numbers for Samsung's two wide-angle cameras were not available

    Read full review

  • digitalcamerainfo.com

    Editors' rating: 76

    Summary: The Kodak EasyShare P880 is perhaps the most difficult to use of the EasyShares. It isn't incredibly difficult to figure out, but its buttons are scattered and some are stiff and hard to move. The 8 megapixel digital camera is shaped like an SLR, but ...

    Read full review

Digital cameras
Digital camera finder
Editors' top digital cameras
Digital camera buying guide
Digital SLR buying guide
See all digital camera reviews
sponsored
Related resources
Find discontinued Eastman Kodak Co. digital cameras