Sony's new Cybershot point-and-shoot - the TX55 - is a uncanny small camera. It combines a tiny, slim body with a outrageous 3.3-inch shade (which takes up roughly the whole back of the camera) and a far-too-large 16.2MP sensor.
It moreover adds in sufficient photo-processing program to make comparison versions of photoshop look similar to pencil and paper.
The initial gimmick is "By Pixel Super Resolution" and its sub-category, "Clear Image Zoom". This is a 5x digital zoom, that comes in add-on to the 5x visual zoom. we know what you're thinking. Digital wizz only blows up the picture, and doesn't obviously do any zooming. Sony claims that its chronicle takes full fortitude photos "without obscure the pixel count."
What does this unequivocally mean? Interpolation. The camera uses its brain to increase new pixels in between the blocky zoomed ones, smoothing things out. This can of course help, but still isn't unequivocally a zoom.
The other gimmick is mistake 3-D, that the TX55 calculates by gnawing two unbroken shots and using the initial to guess height information. A "3-D" picture is then produced.
Other than this, you obtain the right away mandatory operation of toy-camera filters, along with Sony's tidy brush panoramas where you only vessel the camera to takeover a breathtaking scene.
It's flattering coherent that the low finish of the point-and-shoot marketplace is dying, as cellphones are right away more than able of gnawing great photos. Sony seems to be tackling with old-school megapixel selling and app-like FX. Hell, the thing even looks more similar to a cellphone than a camera. $350, existing in September.
Sony's Newest Cyber-Shot Camera Expands Range of Creative Options [Sony]
See Also:
Olympus Super-Zoom Shoots Movies and Stills Simultaneously …
What You Need to Know When Buying a Digital Camera
Sony Adds Entry-Level Digicam
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