
| Sensor | CCD 6 mégapixels (1/2,5) |
| Zoom | 3x (35 - 105 mm / F2.8 - F5.0) |
| Optical stabilization | oui |
| Internal/external memory | 27 Mo / SD, MMC, SDHC |
| Sensitivity | 100 - 3200 ISO |
| Video mode | 848 x 480 pixels / 30 fps |
| Power source | 2 batteries AA |
| Dimensions/Weight | 93.7 x 62 x 29.7 mm / 188 g |

What is it? Movement detectors help to compensate for camera shake with an opposite movement of the lens to stabilize the camera.
The consequence is immediate with a greater number of photos without flash indoors and less noise. From our experience, we realized that under equivalent lighting conditions, when a non-stabilized camera functions at 800 ISO, a stabilized model is at 200 ISO. For this reason images are cleaner. As for sharpness, stabilization only compensates for the movements of the photographer. If the subject is in movement, the image will be blurry.
The movement detector
And for this reason, we have the second automatic function which is almost the opposite. If the sensor detects that the subject is in movement, it imposes an increase in sensitivity (ISO), which directly translates into a faster exposure time. Actually, it’s mathematical: doubling the sensitivity = we divide the exposure time in half. For example: 100 ISO is at 1/10s, 200 ISO is at 1/20s, 400 ISO is at 1/40s and 800 ISO is at 1/80s. In principal, detectors do not go beyond these settings. This system may add noise to photos; however, it assures sharpness even when the subject moves.
Summary : between stabilization and the movement detector, this camera tries to provide the greatest number of sharp photos, even if the photographer shakes a bit or the subject moves. On the other hand, it means we let the camera automatically set all parameters. Some prefer to have a little more control...
Test date: 2007-12-15
For less than 100 Euros: Canon vs. Panasonic
Amongst recent cameras for less than 100 Euros which are supposed to rival the LS60 is Canon’s PowerShot A460 (an A470 was announced but is more expensive). The A460 is a 5 megapixel, the LS60 a 6 Mpixel. In terms of image quality, the two are more or less equivalent amply sufficing for 13 x 18 cm prints and occasionally for an A4 if lighting conditions are good. By the way, one very important point is that ''only'' 6 megapixel cameras like this LS60 produce photos with an average file size of 1.5 MB. Those of the Panasonic FX100 and its 12 megapixels are almost 6 MB each! The bigger they are, the more place in memory is taken up on the hard drive and the longer they are to transfer. It’s useless to hound after additional megapixels unless you want to print extremely large images.
Back to our Canon vs. Panasonic duel… The LS60 is stabilized, the A460 is not (for indoor portraits without a flash, the LS60 is much better). The LS60 has a movement detector unlike the A460. Also, the LS60 guarantees autonomy of 270 photos with the two included AA batteries while the A460 gave us 120 photos. Either way, our recommendation here is that once the alkaline batteries are dead, make the change to ones that can be recharged.
Handling
Even if the LS60 is very low priced it is still sturdy. With a width of 3 cm (4 cm for Canon’s A460), the finished product is compact and discreet. The interface is composed of 7 buttons that most will not use too much, preferring to rely on the ''all automatic'' option.
To have such a low price and still offer good image quality (see below), of course Panasonic had to make some sacrifices. We noticed the fragility of doors, the poor placement of the memory card, the small 2 inch screen (5.1 cm) with a lack of fluidity and visible matrix (only 86,000 pixels), and the overall look is less attractive than the FX series (more expensive!).
Quality of images
With the risk of disappointing those who shelled out more for the FX33, we have to point out that the LS60 and FX33 produce the same image quality with the same colors and sharpness. The FX33 is only superior on one point: its wide angle lens offers a larger view. For the rest, they are perfectly equal, even if one is a 6 megapixel and the other an 8 megapixel.
Therefore and unsurprisingly, we find slightly warmer photos which are still natural, with good sharpness, well controlled noise and fine reactivity.
Furthermore, given the price, we should keep in mind the last product survey on children’s digital cameras (all proved to be catastrophic). Would the LS60 not be a perfect product for your little one (with a leash, of course)? It would at least make nice photos and children would be more encouraged by results. Also, it resembles a real camera, which it actually is.
The defect of the DMC-LS60 is that shoots video in 848 x 480 pixels; however, without sound!
And one last question: Are we unreasonable to spend the double or triple for an FX33? No, of course not. The wide angle, thinner form, superior finishing touches, better screen and video with sound justify the price difference. Or at least for those who value these characteristics.
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- Low price
- Simple to use
- Optical stabilization
- Movement detection
- Same image quality as the FX33
- Video is muted
- No wide angle
- Small and poorly refreshed screen, crude
- Finishing touches inferior to the FX line







Product face-offs










