CNET editors' review
- CNET editors' rating: stars Good
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 03/16/2003
- Updated on: 03/19/2003
- Released on: 11/01/2002
![]() The navigation rocker switch is easier to use than most. |
![]() You can quickly navigate the S5's rather spare menu system. |
Unfortunately, the S5's design pales in comparison to the annoyance of its stupidly placed shutter and power buttons. These controls are right next to each other, and some may find them hard to distinguish by feel, which can make for plenty of frustrated cussing after all. A final small gripe about the physical controls: While we like the one-touch access for flash settings and macro/infinity-focus modes, we'd prefer to access the self-timer via a button rather than through menus. We'd also like to see controls for exposure compensation and white balance on the body in a camera of this class.
On the other hand, we have no significant complaints about the menu itself, apart from the mystifying Chroma option, which should have been labeled contrast. If you have even modest prior experience with a digicam, you should be able to use the S5 without even cracking the spine of the well-organized and complete owner's manual.
![]() Rather than make it a menu option, Kyocera gives the S5 a mode specifically for changing camera settings. |
The rest of the S5's capabilities are pretty typical. They include manual white balance, in addition to auto and four presets; three metering options; a seven-step manual focus, which is helpful when you're shooting a subject behind glass or in low light; and selectable ISO settings of 100, 200, and 400. A few options under the Setup menu are worth pointing out. Mode Lock lets you choose whether settings such as white balance are saved or restored to the default when you power off the camera. Volume controls for beeps and shutter sounds will spare your neighbors some irritation if you're taking snapshots at a school play.
As with many digital cameras, Kyocera supplements the basic still-photo functions with a movie mode that captures motion video at one of two Web-friendly resolutions. The S5 gives you the option of recording movies with or without audio; selecting the silent-film mode lets you zoom during video recording, while the zoom lens is disabled for talkies. There's a pragmatic reason for this: the lens motor is loud.
![]() This 1,000mAh battery keeps going and going and going. |
We welcomed the S5's manual-focus capability when shooting indoors under ambient light because when the illumination drops below a certain level, autofocus performance gets a little spotty. For example, with late-afternoon sunlight filtering through drapes, the same subject might be sharply focused in one exposure but blurry in the next. Outdoors, the autofocus tends to be consistently on target.
Not all performance news is bad, however. For instance, the battery lasts a long, long time; we gave up trying to drain it after 450 shots taken with a variety of flash and LCD settings. Plus, the cell expires gracefully, still allowing for plenty of shots after the low-battery indicator appears. We also like the bright LCD, which we found usable even in direct sunlight, albeit with some squinting. You'll definitely want to rely on the LCD when composing close-up shots, as the CCD's actual area of coverage is 20 percent larger than the optical viewfinder suggests.So how do the S5's photos actually look upon close inspection? Mixed. We first suggest boosting the in-camera sharpness level by a step or two, as the default setting is just a little soft for our tastes. We also recommend experimenting with the white-balance options a bit. For instance, under incandescent light, the bright-sunlight setting actually gave more pleasing results than the incandescent mode, which tended to be excessively cool. We had similar trouble with the weak sunlight of a late January afternoon.
![]() Automatic white balance ably tackled this difficult tungsten lighting. |
![]() Shots taken at the ISO 400 setting display excessive noise. |
![]() Images look soft for a 5-megapixel camera, and even shots at ISO 100 show a lot of noise in the dark reds. |
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