Home > Digital Camera Reviews > Kodak Digital Cameras > Kodak EasyShare V610 - Easy Digital Camera Review
Kodak EasyShare V610 - Easy Digital Camera Review
by Richard Baguley
Two heads are better than one, so how about two lenses? The 6.1-megapixel Kodak EasyShare V610 has two lenses and two image sensors and is part of a series of cameras that follows the dual lens design. This design provides a wide 10x zoom range from 38-380mm in a very skinny space and without a bulky protrusion. Both lenses on the Kodak V610 are completely enclosed within the camera body. The camera is also Bluetooth-enabled and sells for about $300. Although the V610 has a sleek, clean design that’s just 0.9 inches deep, this doesn’t translate into easy handling. The flat surfaces of the camera look good, but don’t provide much for the fingers to grasp. The zoom control on the back falls under the thumb, but the camera can slip when you are moving from wide to telephoto.
Holding the V610 in two hands is more comfortable, and the 5 buttons on the left side of the back encourage this. These controls are for setting the scene mode, deleting images, accessing the on-screen menu, reviewing captured photos and transferring photos. The latter of these kicks off a special menu that allows you to flag images for printing or emailing through the included Kodak EasyShare software. The other on-screen menus are a little confusing: there are a lot of options that take an age to scroll through.
One annoying quirk of the V610 is the pause when switching between lenses. The bottom lens measures 38-114mm, while the top measures 130-380mm. Notice the gap between 114mm and 130mm? You’ll definitely see it on the V610, and it will be recorded in movies too. It’s a bit annoying, but it’s the price you pay to carry an ultra-zoom camera in a 0.9-inch thick case.
The 2.8-inch LCD screen is very good with its 230k pixels. It is sharp and bright and has a very wide viewing angle; it would be great for showing off photos to a group. Unfortunately, the images aren’t going to wow your friends and family: we found that the image quality of the photos wasn’t that good. Colors were inaccurate, with blues and greens in particular being seriously out of line. There was also some noise at higher ISO settings, but this was no worse or better than most other cameras at this price.
Kodak’s Perfect Touch technology can correct for some of these problems: it processes the image in the playback mode to adjust the colors and brighten underexposed pictures, but it’s not perfect and can take several seconds to process an image. There are 22 scene modes on offer, and a decent movie mode that captures videos at 640 x 480-pixel resolution at 30 frames per second in MPEG-4 format. You can also use the 10x full zoom range while shooting a movie, but you will get the annoying pause while the camera switches between lenses.
The EasyShare V610 was a little slow at starting up and capturing photos: it took around 2 seconds before it was ready to take images when turned on, and the shutter delay ranged from 0.43 seconds (with the camera pre-focused) to an unacceptable 1.69 seconds when the camera had to focus before shooting. Both of these are on the long side and could lead to lost images. It also shot at a speed of around 1.6 frames per second for a maximum of 8 frames. Again, that’s a bit on the slow side; shooting at a football game with this camera could lead to a missed play.
The V610 includes a Bluetooth wireless adapter, so it can connect to Bluetooth PCs, printers and cell phones. This definitely makes transferring and printing images easy for those consumers who already have Bluetooth devices.
The Kodak EasyShare V610 is a promising camera; the dual-lens technology allows it to pack a wide zoom range into a small case. And it’s well priced: although it launched at $449, you can pick it up now for around $300. But there are some issues that make it less attractive such as the poor handling, the lackluster image quality, and the annoying zoom pause. All of this takes the edge off an otherwise attractive camera; hopefully Kodak will deal with these problems in future versions of this model.
| Kodak EasyShare V610 - THE BOTTOM LINE.... Rating: 335.67 |
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| Likes |
| - Large, clear LCD screen with wide viewing angle - Compact, innovative design - Communicates with Bluetooth printers and computers - Perfect Touch technology corrects for common shooting problems - Zoom works when shooting movies - Wide ISO range for low-light shooting - Manual controls |
| Dislikes |
| - Burst mode is slow - Inaccurate colors - Long gap between pressing the shutter and image capture - Image preview doesn’t look like the captured images - Awkward controls - Slight pause when switching lenses - Short battery life |
Kodak EasyShare V610 Compared to the...
| Kodak EasyShare V570 Rating: 288.95 |
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ1
Rating: N/A |
Nikon Coolpix S4
Rating: 266.34
|
Casio Exilim EX-Z700 Rating: 310.14 |
Olympus Stylus 1000 Rating: 326.83 |
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| Better | Better | Better | Better | Better |
| - Slightly smaller - Shoots 2.3 frames per second in burst mode (V610 only does 1.6 fps) |
- Optical image stabilization - Flash is positioned away from fingers |
- 6-megapixel image sensor | - 7-megapixel image sensor - Cheaper at around $250 - 34 shooting modes |
- 10-megapixel image sensor - Can go to a maximum ISO setting of 6400 (albeit at lower resolution) - Image stabilization - more powerful, better placed flash |
| Equal | Equal | Equal | Equal | Equal |
| - Same resolution LCD screen - Same selection of shooting modes |
- 10x optical zoom - ISO range of 80 to 800 - Similarly poor burst mode that shoots only 2 frames per second |
- Costs about $300 - 10x optical zoom, but from a single lens |
- 2.7-inch LCD screen - Similar playback modes with slideshows and multi-image views |
- Similar playback modes - Similar selection of shooting modes |
| Worse | Worse | Worse | Worse | Worse |
| - Top ISO setting of 800 only works in lower resolutions - Optical zoom limited to 3x in movie mode - 5 megapixel image sensor - 2.5-inch LCD screen |
- Thicker body with protruding lens - LCD screen is slightly lower resolution and doesn’t have as wide angle of view. - 5 megapixels |
- Movie mode records at only 15 frames per second - Much larger - Flash is right by the lens, producing harsh shadows and red-eye - No image stabilization |
- Flash is smaller and has vignetting on edges - 3x zoom lens - LCD screen is much lower resolution; only 153k pixels |
- 3x zoom lens - 2.5-inch LCD screen - More expensive |







