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Product Survey: Compact Digital Cameras 2009 >
Kodak EasyShare C1013
Sensor CCD 10 mégapixels (1 / 2,3)
Zoom 3x (F2,7 - F4,8 / 34 - 102 mm)
Optical stabilization non
Internal/external memory 16 Mo / SD / SDHC
Sensitivity 80 - 1000 ISO
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Video mode 640 x 480 pixels / 15 fps
Power source 2 x AA
Dimensions/Weight 91 x 62 x 25 mm / 134 g
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Nilofar Hadjanadjiboudine
Test date: January 20, 2009
Perfect touch
The EasyShare C1013 has picture enhancing and editing features. Once you are on the picture that needs a bit of extra help, all you have to do is select the option from the menu. You can then for example crop or clear up dark shadows etc. for better results.
With some swanky technology such as face detection and on-camera picture enhancing and editing features, Kodak’s EasyShare C1013 seemed like a promising budget camera.

Handling
Nothing to marvel about in terms of design here: the body is made of thick plastic and the interface is far too small. Even the on/off button is tiny. The 2.4 inch LCD has a 115,000 dots resolution.



Navigation is rather puzzling. Most often, macro mode is to be selected within the menu. Here you have to turn the dial on top of the camera. Automatic mode also has specifications usually found in P mode.
The camera is not very fast and it takes a whole second for AF to detect the subject in bright daylight. In poor light, the camera is unable to autofocus at all. Shutter lag is on the slow side (2,20 seconds).

Image quality

Inside our studio, this little camera fared poorly. Automatic white balance is far too warm and the picture is overexposed with little detail in high light. The resolution is however that of a 10 MP. Outdoors the colours are rather good. In high sensitivity, the camera fails to adapt. Overexposure increases and there is noise. This sort of quality is just good enough for a 10x15 print. As there is no optical image stabilizer, a digital system steps in to limit camera shake. The sharpest photo was captured in 1/8 s and 200 ISO.


Macro mode is not very inspiring either at 13 cm. Video (640 x 480) records only 15 frames per second, therefore playback is not very fluid. You can record sound, but the optical zoom cannot be used with video on.



Automatic white balance differs according to sensitivity. From 80 to 100 ISO, colours go reddish, whereas beyond they are more neutral.


In terms of competition, Panasonic’s entry level DMC-FS3 is not any faster than the EasyShare C1013, but both picture and video quality as well as macro mode are better.
 

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face detection

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easy sharing of pictures on computer

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No zoom when recording video - 15 f/s

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macro mode at 13 cm

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overexposure

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slow

Sadly we were not too impressed by the EasyShare C1013. With video playback at 15 f/s, macro at 13 cm and unsatisfying noise reduction, there is not much to be said. Better spend a few more quid and get Panasonic’ s DMC-LS80 which will deliver better pictures.

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