advertisement

Olympus Stylus 820 (Silver)

PALM BUTTONS BAG
OVR
PALM BUTTONS BAG

Product summary

The goodThe good: Sleek metal body; Perfect Shot Preview is a surprisingly useful feature.

The badThe bad: Painfully slow shot-to-shot time; overly soft pictures, especially at higher ISO settings.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: It looks good and its features are nice, but the Olympus Stylus 820's photos and performance simply aren't up to snuff.

Specifications: Digital camera type: Ultracompact; Resolution: 8 megapixels; Optical zoom: 5 x; See full specs

Price range: $149.95 - $229.99

See all products in the Olympus Stylus 820 series

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 09/24/2007
  • Updated on:10/18/2007

Editor's note: This review has been updated to reflect changes in performance based on subsequent testing by our labs.

Olympus continues the Stylus line of digital cameras with the Stylus 820, an attractive 8-megapixel digital camera. This new model sports a 5x lens, a large, bright LCD screen, and a surprisingly useful new feature Olympus is debuting with its current generation of cameras.

As we've come to expect from Olympus' Stylus cameras, the Stylus 820 looks and feels good. The slim, all-metal camera weighs just 4.9 ounces with battery and xD card and measures less than an inch deep. Olympus offers the little camera in four colors: silver, black, blue, and red. Its sturdy body handles splashes and showers with ease, but don't confuse weather-resistant for weatherproof; it won't survive a full dunking. If you plan to soak your camera, consider instead the waterproof, shockproof, freezeproof Stylus 790 SW.

Two features distinguish the 8-megapixel 820: its lens and its screen. A f/3.3-to-f/5.0, 36mm-to-180mm-equivalent, 5x zoom lens provides a longer reach than similarly priced competitors such as the Canon PowerShot SD1000 and the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W80, and it features a slightly larger than usual 2.7-inch LCD screen. Among the Stylus family, its 7-megapixel sibling the Stylus 780 delivers a better feature combination for the same money; it's essentially the same camera but adds sensor-shift image stabilization in exchange for dropping down to 7 megapixels and a more typical 2.5-inch display. If you want it all--the stabilization, display, and higher resolution--you'll need to cough up about $80 for an identical step-up model, the Stylus 830.

Like the other members of this generation of Styluses, the Stylus 820 includes a feature called Perfect Shot Preview that shows you how different settings will affect your shots by displaying those effects in four frames onscreen. For example, if you access exposure compensation, it will show you a neutral exposure, plus what the picture will look like at +0.3, +0.7, and +1.0 EV. You can use the control pad to navigate the previews, so you can see how the shot will look at any EV level. You can also look at the different effects of white balance, zoom levels, and even metering settings. Most cameras let you see how these different settings will look before you shoot, but this is the first time I've seen multiple previews on one screen. When shooting in awkward lighting, you'll quickly grow to appreciate the ability to simultaneously preview four different white balance settings, or compare ESP and spot metering. For direct-to-print devotees, a new variant of Olympus' panorama mode will automatically stitch together as many as three shots.

The Stylus 820 fared poorly in our lab tests, taking a painfully long time between shots at the camera's default system settings. After a 2.1-second wait from power-on to first shot, we measured an unacceptably slow 3.5 seconds between every shot thereafter, with the onboard flash turned off. With the flash enabled, that wait increased to 4.1 seconds. The camera's shutter proved responsive enough, lagging just 0.5 second with our high-contrast target and 1.3 seconds with our low-contrast target. The camera includes a burst mode, but that mode cranks down resolution to 3 megapixels, rendering it ineligible for our tests.

The 230,000-pixel display boasts an impressively wide field of view; I could make out the picture it was displaying regardless of the angle of the screen. This wide viewing angle works great when shooting concerts or any other situation that requires you to hold the camera above your head, at your chest, or far to the side. Olympus claims that its LCD screen includes antiglare technology that lets you view it even in sunlight. While the display still suffers from reflections and glare under any direct light source, it indeed remains surprisingly legible in bright light.

The Stylus 820's photos are typical of budget models: decent, but with nothing to distinguish them from most competitors. It possesses a pleasantly broad dynamic range, preserving detail in both shadows and highlights, with neutral if somewhat slightly undersaturated colors. As with many cameras in its class, the lens produces photos that are relatively sharp in the middle, but which rapidly lose sharpness and increase distortion as you move toward the periphery (not to be confused with softness due to shallow depth of field). Shots taken up to and including ISO 200 ISO look okay, though overprocessing leaves broad swathes of details such as grass and leaves with a crunchy digital look. Aggressive noise reduction at ISO 400 and above eradicates color grain at the expense of sharpness and detail; by ISO 800 and ISO 1,600, text and other details look as if they were sanded down. For Web sites, e-mail, and 4x6 prints, though, you probably won't notice most of the effects of the noise reduction.

The Olympus Stylus 820 packs some pretty useful features in its stylish metal case. There aren't a lot of options at this price for an ultracompact with a 5x zoom lens, but the slow performance and so-so photo quality may not be worth the trade-off. You may want to consider a comparably priced 3x zoom model such as the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W80 or opt to shell out some more cash for a better 5x zoom model such as the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T100.

Shooting speed (in seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Time to first shot  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Canon PowerShot SD1000
1.5 
1 
0.5 
Olympus Stylus 820
3.5 
2 
0.5 
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W80
1.2 
1.8 
0.6 
Olympus Stylus 810
3 
2.7 
0.7 

See more CNET content tagged:
Olympus Corp.,
LCD screen,
camera,
shot,
lens

User reviews

Submit your review

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

Olympus Stylus 820 (Silver)

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

Where to buy

Olympus Stylus 820 (Silver): $149.95 - $229.99
storepricein stock?rating
Refurb Depot
$149.95 Yes 3.5 star rating
RitzCamera.com
$229.99 Yes 5.0 star rating
6th Ave.
$174.06 Yes 3.0 star rating

see prices from 3 stores

Similar products

Where to buy Olympus Stylus 820 (Silver)

$149.95 - $229.99
See all stores

Special sponsor stores

advertisement Special Sponsor Offer
Click Here
advertisement

Reviews from around the Web

  • digitalcameraroundup.com

    Summary: The "smile" mode is interesting. When the camera detects a smiling face in shooting standby mode, it takes three frames in high-speed sequential shooting automatically (or you can do it manually). While this mode is selected, the self-timer lamp blinks. P

    Read full review

  • digicamera.com

    Summary: The ultra-compact 820 is a nice addition to the Stylus line. You get an attractive, handy 8-megapixel point & shoot camera that comes in a variety of cool colors. It costs $50 more than Olympus's own new FE-280 and justifies that with a larger display

    Read full review

  • pcworld.com

    Editors' rating: 74

    Summary: The Stylus 820 is flashy, but if you're going to pay for its weatherproof features, you might as well opt for one of the Stylus SW models and get true protection from the elements

    Read full review

powered by alaTest

Before you buy
Digital camera finder
Editors' top digital cameras
Digital camera buying guide
Digital SLR buying guide
See all digital camera reviews
sponsored
advertisement
Click Here