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Nikon Coolpix S1000pj

Caractéristiques
SensorCCD 12 MP, 1/2.3
Lens5 x 28-140 mm f/3.9-5.8
Optical stabilisationYes
Internal/external memory36 / SD - SDHC
Sensitivity (ISO range)80-1600 (6400 to 3 Mpx) ISO
Show all specifications
Video mode640 x 480 pixels / 30 fps
Power sourceEN-EL12 battery
Dimensions/Weight100 x 63 x 23 mm / 155 g
Hide specifications
Franck Mée
Test date: December 24, 2009
The Projector

The video projector built into the S1000pj, not surprisingly, is fairly limited. The definition is limited to VGA and the brightness tops out at 10 lumens. Living-room projectors produce over 1,000 lumens!

That means the room you’ll be doing your projecting in has to be really dark. Once you’ve darkened the room, any plain white surface will do as a screen. You just press a button, adjust the focus, and browse at will, either using the buttons on the camera or the remote control.

You can move from one picture to another, zoom and move around within a picture, and play video files – though the sound quality from the built-in speaker is very limited. In short, it has everything you need to show your shots and movies to your friends. As far as the projector goes, despite the inevitable technical limitations, the camera delivers what it promises.

The one thing we’d like to see most on the next version is backlighting for the buttons on the remote control. They’re hard to read considering how dark the room has to be to use the projector, and the fact that they’re grey with a black background doesn’t help any.

At a time when all – or almost all – compacts have a 5x zoom, a 12 Mpx sensor, a 6.9 cm (2.7”) or 7.6 cm (3”) display screen, and similar size and cost, it’s getting hard to set yourself apart from the pack. Nikon is taking a long shot – a digital camera with a built-in video projector. It’s an original solution that makes the Coolpix S1000pj unique among the hundred or so cameras released in 2009.

Handling

The Nikon S1000pj is instantly recognizable, with its Picasso-style nose in the middle of its face and second eye above. We’ll let you decide how elegant-looking you think it is, but just about everyone on the team here found it extremely ugly. The metal body looks sturdy, but the build quality isn’t perfect. The fit of the battery compartment lid, for example, isn’t great – on our test model, it tended to stay closed even when unlatched.


At the rear are a 6.9 cm (2.7") 230,000 dpi LCD screen, with a highly visible weave and pronounced clouding in shadows. Even worse, since it’s a TN-technology display, the display becomes dark – and thus useless – when taking a downward-angled shot. For the rest, the S1000pj is laid out like other Coolpix models. Operation is simple and the interface is clear, if not elegant. The new controls related to the inclusion of the projector (see inset) are located on the upper part of the body.

The remote control that comes with the camera works in projector mode, of course, but also in snapshot mode. So you can use it to control the S1000pj (including the zoom) remotely, which may be an interesting feature for tripod users. However, its very plastic-looking construction and mediocre surface finish are disappointing.

Responsiveness

The S1000pj’s responsiveness inspires no particular comment. Start-up is a little quicker than average, and focusing is neither slow nor fast. The delay between shots is a little long (2.5 seconds), and the burst mode is really quite disappointing. It’s slow – barely over one frame per second – and it hangs after the fifth frame.


Image quality

We’ll cut to the chase: If the S1000pj has a weakness, this is it. The lens really lacks evenness, especially at wide-angle, with a fairly good centre but edges that are particularly fuzzy. Purple fringing is very visible at high contrast, even on medium-sized prints. In telephoto, the contrast is never good, even in the centre, and the purple fringing is no fainter.


For sensor sensitivity, Nikon isn’t among the best. Purplish zones in darker areas, a chronic weakness of this little 12 Mpx, already appear at 400 ISO, along with the first evidence of smoothing intended to contain digital noise. From 800 ISO, details are diluted. We’ll be charitable and not even mention the higher values.

Video

Video is not a strong point either. The definition (640x480 pixels) is unexciting, the recorded sound is mediocre, the optical zoom doesn’t work during recording and the image shows clouding in the shadows. The video performance is no worse than with a lot of compacts, true; but some do much better.
Pluses

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Original concept –video projector

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Clear interface and menus

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Comes with remote control

Minuses

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Disappointing image quality; lacks sharpness and sensitivity

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Video is low-definition; no optical zoom in video mode

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Looks a little clunky; build quality could be better

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Poor display resolution, narrow viewing angles

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Lens lacks brightness (maximum f/3.9!)

3
With the S1000pj, Nikon is trying out a new concept: “Your personal theater on the go” – a camera that lets you show your photos and video to your friends. Unfortunately, this doesn't overshadow the fact that the camera as such is just plain mediocre.

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