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Reviews from around the WebPowered by alaTest
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alaTest.com
Editors' rating: 85
Summary: alaTest has collected and analyzed 299 reviews of Konica Minolta DiMAGE X1 from international magazines and websites. Experts rate this product 69/100 and users 73/100. Comparing these reviews to 540866 other Digital Compact Cameras reviews gives this product an overall alaScore™ 85/100 = Very Good.
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techradar.com
Editors' rating: 100
Summary: The camera doesn't feature any built-in memory but it does take SD/MMC format cards and a 32MB card is supplied with the camera
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personal computer world
Editors' rating: 80
Summary: This 8megapixel compact impresses in some, but not all, areas
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cameras.co.uk
Editors' rating: 75
Summary: The Konica Minolta Dimage X1 looks impressive and with eight megapixels it sounds impressive. Picture quality does not match up though and shutter lag is also a big problem with this camera.
CNET editors' buying advice
We have not reviewed this product but here is CNET's buying advice on Digital cameras. This content was chosen based on the features included with this model of digital camera.
Image stabilization (Anti-shake)
When using handheld cameras at slow shutter speeds, or with high optical zoom, image stabilization (aka anti-shake) will help with capturing sharper images. There are two types of image stabilization, optical and electronic. Electronic, or digital, stabilization works by shifting pixels within the image frame to interpolate sharpness. Optical sharpness is attained by physical movement within either the camera body or the lens element, which compensates for handheld shaking. Of the two, optical is generally considered more favorable by most photographers.
Read more in the Digital Camera Buying Guide
Snapshooter
The casual photographer needs a camera that is easy to carry and easy to use, so compact and ultracompact cameras make the best choice. These digital cameras are the most useful for taking snapshots anywhere, and can produce nice photos for email, web, or prints smaller than 8x10 inches.
The specs that matter
| Resolution | It doesn't matter. Most digital cameras on the market today have sufficient resolution for your needs. |
| Price | $150 to $300 |
| Lens type | Zoom (range encompassing at least 38mm to 114mm, 35mm equivalent) |
| Storage media | Internal memory, CompactFlash, Memory Stick, xD-Picture Card, or Secure Digital/MultiMediaCard |
| Photo file format | JPEG |
| Interfaces | USB, NTSC/PAL television connection |
| Exposure controls | Automatic, programmed scene modes, exposure compensation (for tweaking the automatic exposure) |
| Focus controls | Automatic |
| Flash modes | Automatic, fill, red-eye reduction |
| Software | Photo stitching, photo album, slide show |
| Multimedia | VGA (640x480), 30fps video-clip recording with sound |
| Cool features to look for | Direct-to-printer (PictBridge) output compatibility, in-camera red-eye removal, automatic exposure fix, optical or mechanical image stabilization, face detection |
Read more in the Digital Camera Buying Guide


