Sony Cyber-shot T900 (silver)
As shown: $379.99
See manufacturer site for availability
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: Joshua Goldman
- Released on:
- Reviewed on:
The good: Fast performance; excellent design, LCD; optical zoom works in movie mode.
The bad: Short battery life; photo quality merely OK for the money; touch-screen not for everyone.
The bottom line: Though some will be disappointed by its photo quality, the barely there, high-tech Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T900 is a very good ultracompact camera.
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T900 is immediately impressive. A 12-megapixel camera with a stabilized 4x internal zoom lens, 3.5-inch touch-screen display with a resolution four times that of a typical camera LCD, and few physical controls in a body that's roughly half-an-inch thick and is so light there's a good chance your wallet weighs more. (Well, at least before you buy a T900, anyway.) Of course, you might expect excellent photos for that money, too, and that's where the T900 comes up a bit short.
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The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T900 is immediately impressive. A 12-megapixel camera with a stabilized 4x internal zoom lens, 3.5-inch touch-screen display with a resolution four times that of a typical camera LCD, and few physical controls in a body that's roughly half-an-inch thick and is so light there's a good chance your wallet weighs more. (Well, at least before you buy a T900, anyway.) Of course, you might expect excellent photos for that money, too, and that's where the T900 comes up a bit short.
| Key specs | Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T900 |
| Price (MSRP) | $379.99 |
| Dimensions | 3.9 inches wide by 2.3 inches high by 0.6 inch deep |
| Weight (with battery and media) | 5.2 ounces |
| Megapixels, image sensor size, type | 12 megapixels, 1/2.3-inch CCD |
| LCD size, resolution | 3.5-inch LCD, 921K dots |
| Lens (zoom, aperture, focal length) | 4x, f3.5-4.6, 35-140mm (35mm equivalent) |
| File format (still/video) | JPEG/MPEG-4 |
| Highest resolution size (still/video) | 4,000x3,000 pixels/1,280x720 at 30fps |
| Image stabilization type | Mechanical and electronic |
| Battery type, rated life | Lithium ion rechargeable, 200 shots |
The camera has an elegant feel with a full metal body up front and sides, and nothing but screen on the back. A wrist strap loop off the right side doubles as a thumbrest--otherwise your thumb's on the screen. The only physical controls are the power and shutter buttons on top, with a zoom ring around the shutter release and a switch at the back of the ring for going between shooting stills and movies. The only other button is a small Playback mode button at the top of the display. On the bottom is the battery/Memory Stick compartment, a proprietary connector for use with the included USB/AV cable and multioutput dock, and a tripod mount. To take a picture you simply slide down the metal lens cover and click away. You'll want to be careful of errant fingers getting in shots and touching the lens, however, as the lens is positioned at the far left.
Sony's high-contrast Xtra Fine display is quite good. At its Normal brightness setting, there was no issue seeing the screen in direct sunlight. Well, after wiping away fingerprints there was no issue; the T900 seems to collect more than most. If having to wipe off fingerprints is a deal breaker, you'll want to skip this camera and probably all touch-screen models for that matter. Aside from fingerprints, you might take issue with the touch screen's responsiveness. I found the T900's to be fine with fingers, but better with the included stylus (or Paint Pen as Sony calls it) likely because you can be more precise with it. It clips onto the wrist strap and allows you to quickly poke around the three onscreen menus (Home, Menu, and Display) along with the in-camera retouching and painting tools (you can add stamps, frames, or draw on pictures) all while keeping the screen free of fingerprints.
Navigating the camera settings is easy enough, once you remember what menu system you want. The Home menu gives you access to all the main features and options, while the Menu screen provides context-sensitive options; for instance, if you're taking still pictures, you get all the settings related to the shooting mode you're in.
| General shooting options | Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T900 |
| ISO sensitivity (full resolution) | Auto, 80, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1,600, 3,200 |
| White balance | Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Fluorescent 1, 2, and 3, Incandescent, Flash, Underwater Auto, 1, and 2 |
| Recording modes | Intelligent Auto, Easy, Program Auto, Movie, Scenes |
| Focus | 9- point AF, Center-weighted AF, Spot AF, Touch AF, Semi-manual (0.5m, 1m, 3m, 7m, ∞) |
| Metering | Multi, Center-weighted, Spot |
| Color effects | Normal, Vivid, Sepia, Black & White |
| Burst mode shot limit (full resolution) | 100 photos |
Being a snapshot camera there's no reason to expect the T900 to have manual controls for shutter speed and aperture, and it doesn't. You do, however, get four automatic modes: Program Auto has the most controls with access to ISO, exposure, white balance, focus, and metering; Sony's Intelligent Auto; Easy mode that takes away all but a couple basic shooting options; and SCN, which lets you select from five specialty scene situations, but automatically handles all other settings. (There are five additional standard scene modes like portrait and landscape just sort of hanging out in the Mode menu.) If you tend to leave it in Auto mode, Sony's Intelligent Auto turned in reliable results as it picks from eight scene types (branded iSCN) and turns on face detection and image stabilization. Sony's iSCN can be set to Auto or Advanced, the difference being that in difficult lighting the camera will automatically take two shots with different settings so you have a better chance of getting a usable photo. Also worth mentioning is that the T900 has exposure bracketing that'll take three photos, one at the exposure you select and then two more at plus and minus 0.3EV, 0.7EV, or 1.0EV.
Performance is excellent for an ultracompact camera. Start-up time is a fast 1.4 seconds with an identical shot-to-shot time. Turning on the flash has little impact, only going up to 2.2 seconds for it to refresh and capture. Shutter lag is 0.4 second in good lighting, while more challenging dim lighting extends the lag time to an average 0.7 second. The T900's continuous mode is respectably quick, too, at 0.9 frames per second. What's probably the biggest disappointment is battery life: a fresh charge from the included little lithium ion pack gets you about 200 shots.
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Josh started writing about consumer tech more than a decade ago covering everything from software and computers to home theater and audio equipment. He currently covers digital cameras and camcorders for CNET, but occasionally spouts off about other things like laptops, tablets, apps, and anything to do with listening to music.
User Reviews
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Most recent user reviews
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"Agree with everything the review said." By hellfax
Pros: Video quality is surprisingly good. Slideshow mode, facial/smile recognition, and the touch screen may be gimmicky but are nice pluses
Cons: Short battery life and very bad image quality for the price. Requires a specialized dock (included), which is roughly half the size of a small pencil box, to upload photos to your computer. Unless you buy a USB card reader (usually less than $5).
Summary: I also own a DSLR, and wanted a smaller point and shoot for situations where carrying around a giant DSLR would be cumbersome, annoying, and/or not required. For example, a casual night out with friends, or a light camera to keep around at all time. For those situations, I'... Expand full review
"Very Good so far..." By newcalgary
Pros: Really like the responsive touch screen. Great HD video with R and L stereo sound - you can even zoom as you're filming.
Cons: Although I'm not an expert, photo quality is lacking for the price in point and shoot/easy mode. Takes some playing around with settings (there's tons!) to get that great shot. But once you do, they look great!
Summary: Had this camera for about a month and really like it. In "easy' mode, photo quality is lacking for the price. Takes some time to find that setting you need/want then the pic looks great - but again, I've only had it a month. Overall a really nice ... Expand full review
Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- Digital camera type: Ultracompact
- Product Type: Digital camera - Compact
- Resolution: 12.1 megapixels