Review Grounds
Home Contact Us Sitemap
CATEGORIES
Hardware
Hard Drives
CD/DVD Drives
Motherboards
Sound Cards
Video Cards
Processor
Software
Anti-Virus
Finance
Video Editing
Multimedia
Technology
Desktops
Digital Cameras
Laptops
Mobile Phones
MP3 Players
Monitors
Televisions
Pumping Iron
VIP Slots
Home » Technology » Digital Cameras » Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70
Print this review
Email this review

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70

With most compact cameras offering resolutions so ludicrously high that it almost doesn't matter any more, the battleground has moved on to other areas. Chief among these is design.

On this front, Sony's T70 has it all sewn up. It has a remarkably solid body that feels almost like it's hewn out of a single chunk of aluminium. It's only 90mm wide, but still packs in a 3in display. It manages this little feat by being devoid of buttons at the rear. In fact there are only four physical controls on the whole camera, and one of those is the power button - it's all controlled via the screen and a touch interface.

This needs some work though, since it's difficult to get to grips with initially. Hand the camera to a friend in the pub and they're unlikely to be able to find their way around the interface in the way most people now can with standard camera controls.

With its rounded edges and waif-like dimensions the T70 slides beautifully into a pocket, and the solid construction means it'll probably survive if you forget about it and sit down.

When it comes to shooting, you get assistance from the Super Steadyshot image stabilisation, plus very fast autofocus and shutter response times. Resolution is eight megapixels - relatively low compared to many new models but still far more than adequate, and it helps the high ISO performance by not cramming too many pixels into too small a space on the sensor.

That said, the ISO 3200 sensitivity setting is all but unusable, but ISO 1600 is just about acceptable for Facebook snaps. At lower sensitivity settings, some detail is lost to noise-reduction smearing but you'd be hard-pressed to notice at normal viewing distance.

Downsides include an infuriating proprietary USB cable and Sony's dogged insistence on using its own Memory Stick format rather than SD Card, although the price premium on Memory Stick is less than it once was - shop around and you'll pick up a 4GB card for about £20. A token 31MB of internal flash memory will let you take a few shots, too.

The T70 may not be the last word in image quality, but the sheer class it exudes in its design, build and operation, along with a price tag that's a long way from outrageous, means it outstrips Canon's latest IXUS models and earns the T70 a place on the A List.

Other Latest Reviews from the Digital Cameras Category:

SEARCH
POPULAR REVIEWS
Review Grounds ATI Radeon HD 4870
Review Grounds First look: ATI Radeon HD 4850
Review Grounds Nvidia GeForce GTX 280
Review Grounds PNY 9600 GT OC XLR8
Review Grounds PNY 9800 GTX XLR8 OC
Review Grounds Mesh Ultimate XT940 GTO
Review Grounds Asus Nova Lite PX24
Review Grounds Tranquil T2e Atom PC
Review Grounds MSI Wind U100
Review Grounds Fujitsu Siemens Lifebook P8010
RANDOM REVIEW
Trend Micro PC-Cillin Pattern File
Trend Micro PC-Cillin Pattern File
Home  |  Contact Us  |  Sitemap  | 
Copyright © 2008 Review Grounds