The Kodak EasyShare Z5010 is a good example of what Kodak did best with its digital cameras.
Instead of going after the entire market, Kodak concentrated on making cameras that were easy to use and a good value, and that's the Z5010 all over. It's a basic point-and-shoot, but still has a manual mode for shutter speed and aperture control, with a 21x zoom lens, a 3-inch LCD, and AA batteries for power. It also has Kodak's Share button, which lets you easily tag photos and video clips for quick uploading to sharing sites, e-mailing, or sending to Kodak's Pulse picture frames when the camera's connected to a computer.
However, the Z5010's photos are just a step above what you'd get from a good smartphone and its shooting performance is fairly slow -- both typical for this class of camera. And the Z5010 feels like an entry-level camera, too. Then again, you do get a nice wide and long lens and it's priced to move; you can find it for about $100 less than its original $199.95 price.
Photo quality
The Kodak EasyShare Z5010 is capable of taking some very good photos, but it is not without limitations. Basically, if you view its 14-megapixel pictures at larger sizes, 80 to 100 percent, you'll see a good deal of noise and artifacts, and subjects look soft and lack fine detail. That's even at its lowest sensitivity of ISO 64. This is only really a problem if you frequently enlarge and heavily crop your photos or are making prints larger than 8x10. At smaller screen and print sizes, photos taken with plenty of light look good.
The results drop off considerably as you go above ISO 400, which is typical for this class of camera. I wouldn't recommend this camera for regularly taking low-light photos without a flash or with the lens extended indoors. But again, outside with good light you'll get good results. (Read more about the camera's image quality and full-size photos in the slideshow above.)
Movie quality is good enough for posting online, but not great at larger sizes. Clips are limited to 10 minutes in length. The zoom lens on my review camera did function while recording video, and its movement was fairly silent. The continuous autofocus is reasonably quick to focus, but it really depends on lighting, subject, and focal length (the more zoomed in it is and the less light you have, the longer it may take).
Shooting performance
Though the Z5010's box says it has a fast click-to-capture speed, there is some noticeable shutter lag in both bright and dim lighting, especially the latter. From off to first shot takes a couple of seconds, which, combined with the shutter lag, makes it difficult to get those spur-of-the-moment snaps.
Shot-to-shot times change depending on what ISO sensitivity you're shooting at. If you have plenty of light, it's ready to shoot again in a little more than a second, but you'll have to press the shutter release halfway to cancel the image review. However, in low light the camera does some extra image processing that adds a couple seconds to the time. In this case, it's actually faster to use the flash; it cycles quickly for up to five shots before you get a slowdown from processing. The camera can also shoot continuously for eight frames at up to 0.8 frame per second with focus and exposure set with the first shot.
Basically, this camera is best suited for shooting still subjects and not fast-moving kids and pets or sports.
| Key specs | Kodak EasyShare Z5010 |
|---|---|
| Price (MSRP) | $199.95 |
| Dimensions (WHD) | 4.6x3.2x3.1 inches |
| Weight (with battery and media) | 16.7 ounces |
| Megapixels, image sensor size, type | 14 megapixels, 1/2.3-inch CCD |
| LCD size, resolution/viewfinder | 3-inch LCD, 230K dots/None |
| Lens (zoom, aperture, focal length) | 21x, f3.1-5.8, 25-525mm (35mm equivalent) |
| File format (still/video) | JPEG/Motion JPEG (.AVI) |
| Highest resolution size (still/video) | 4,288x3,216 pixels/ 1,280x720 at 30fps |
| Image stabilization type | Optical and digital |
| Battery type, CIPA rated life | AA-size batteries (alkaline or NiMH rechargeable), 300 shots (NiMH) |
| Battery charged in camera | No |
| Storage media | SD/SDHC/SDXC |
| Bundled software | Kodak EasyShare editing software (Windows); Share Button app (Windows, Mac) |
Design and features
The Z5010 is fairly generic-looking in matte black with some silver trim around the lens barrel, but it is clean and simple. The body is all plastic save for a rubberized texture on the hand grip and metal lens surround. On top is the shooting-mode dial with a spring-loaded power switch, along with the shutter release and buttons for flash, macro, and self-timer/continuous options.





