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Pentax Optio M20 - Easy Camera Review

by Emily Raymond


Selling below $200, the Optio M20 aims to be an affordably priced digital camera that still provides a little more than the basics. The Pentax Optio M20 has 7 megapixels, a 3x optical zoom lens, and a 2.5-inch LCD screen. It also has a compelling movie mode and a set of automatic and scene modes to snap pictures.
 
Point-and-shooters will appreciate the ease of use on the M20. The interface is simple, intuitive, and easy to navigate through. For beginners, there is a designated “Green mode” that abridges the menus to 2 flash settings, 3 auto focus settings, and a self-timer option. The camera takes care of everything else so all you have to do is point and shoot.
 
The Pentax M20 doesn’t have much manual control since it does a lot on its own. It even adjusts its own LCD brightness by measuring the ambient light with a sensor atop the camera. This system did well in bright daylight, but it struggled to provide a good picture in low light. Along with the auto and Green modes, the M20 has an additional 11 scene modes. There aren’t any unique modes included. Instead, the scene modes include the usual fare of Portrait, Landscape, etc. There is a Blue Reduction mode that could be useful in low light – except for the fact that it truncates the image size to 4 megapixels or smaller.
 
There is a Frame Composite mode grouped with the scene modes, but it isn’t really a scene mode. It is more like a picture effect; it lets you choose between three cheesy frames including one that appears to be made of computer animated roses. There are other picture effects that can be added in the playback menu. Black and white, sepia, pink, red, purple, blue, green, yellow, and soft filters can be added along with a 13-step brightness adjustment. These look a bit tacky and aren’t for making anything serious, but this effect would be cool for directly printing birthday or greeting cards from the camera. The biggest problem with the filters is that it takes anywhere from 10-30 seconds of processing!
 
 
The 3.7 x 2.4 x 0.9-inch Pentax Optio M20 has a few manual controls. Its ISO can be set up to 1600, although the pictures are quite noisy when the higher sensitivity is activated. The auto focus mode can be set to multiple, spot, or a unique tracking AF mode that follows moving subjects. White balance and exposure compensation can also be set. When the white balance is manually set, the camera produces realistic colors.
 
The Pentax M20 has a 9-point auto focus system, but it doesn’t perform as well as it should. It delays for more than a half-second to take a picture and has serious problems focusing in low light. It does much better in the macro mode where it can focus as close as a centimeter.
 
Running on 2 AA batteries, the Optio M20 has a decent movie mode that records television-quality footage. 640 x 480 and 320 x 240-pixel options are available at 30 or 15 frames per second, which is what most compact digital cameras offer. What other digital cameras don’t offer that the M20 has, though, is a set of color modes. The M20’s movies can be recorded in black and white or sepia. In addition, a digital anti-shake algorithm can be activated to snip a few bumps out of the video. This isn’t as effective as optical image stabilization, but it is better than nothing.
 
Pictures from this Optio can be easily printed to PictBridge or ImageLink printers. The M20 has a menu with plenty of options ranging from the paper size and type, to the print’s quality, and whether or not it should have a border. Overall, the Pentax Optio M20 offers a very basic physical interface. The body is plastic and has fairly cheap components. There is no optical viewfinder. As a result, you have to view the LCD screen that is large at 2.5 inches, but it has sub-par resolution of 115,000 pixels.
 
There are a few flourishes like digital filters and tracking auto focus on the 7.1-megapixel M20 that make it well worth the sub-$200 price tag. If you’re planning on really getting into photography, though, you may want to look for a digital camera that has more manual controls.
 

Pentax Optio M20 - THE BOTTOM LINE....
Rating: 328.04


Likes
- Minimal external controls
- Worry-free Green mode
- Clean menu interface with live view
- Colorful digital filters
- Convenient AA power
- Sub-$200 price
Dislikes
- Lens’ barrel distortion distorts images
- Edges of pictures aren’t sharp
- 0.5-second shutter lag
- Slow start-up and operation
- No metering mode options
- Cheap plastic body


Pentax Optio M20 Compared to the...

Pentax Optio M10
Rating: N/A
Canon PowerShot A540
Rating: N/A
Fujifilm FinePix A600
Rating: N/A
Kodak EasyShare C743
Rating: N/A
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W30
Rating: 292.96
 
 
 
 
 
Better Better Better Better Better
- 12 scene modes
- Cheaper around $149
- 4x optical zoom lens
- Larger f/2.7 aperture
- Manual and priority modes
- Flash exposure adjustment
- Better and more color modes
- 13 scene modes
- Larger 1/1.7-inch image sensor
- Larger max aperture of f/2.8
- Optical viewfinder
- Exposure bracketing
- Designated Share button for printing
- Better included software package
- 32 MB internal memory
- Larger f/2.8 aperture lets more light in lens
- Manual control over shutter speeds from 1-1/2000
- Doesn’t look as cheap
- Comes in three different colors
Equal Equal Equal Equal Equal
- Similar size
- Same sized 1/2.5-inch CCD
- Pentax 3x optical zoom lens
- 2.5-inch LCD screen with 115k
- TTL 9-point auto focus system
- Tracking auto focus mode
- Similar flash power
- Runs on two AA batteries
- Similar price
- Same sized 1/2.5-inch image sensor
- Same sized 2.5-inch LCD screen
- 640 x 480 movies at 30 fps
- Available for under $200
- 3x optical zoom lens
- No metering options
- Sub-$200 price tag
- 7.1 megapixels
- 3x optical zoom lens
- 640 x 480-pixel video at 30 fps
- Easy to use
- Compatible with SD cards
- Similar sub-$200 price
- Same sized 1/2.5-inch image sensor
- 3x optical zoom lens
- VGA movie mode
Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse
- 6 megapixels
- Shorter 2-1/1500 shutter speed range
- ISO only reaches 400
- No manual white balance
- Movie mode records only 320 x 240 and 160 x 120 pixels
- 6 megapixels
- Horrible LCD resolution of 85,000 pixels
- No internal memory
- 6.2 megapixels
- Stocky frame
- Shorter shutter speed range
- Not as many AF modes
- 12 MB internal memory
- 4 scene modes
- QVGA movie mode records a choppy 10 fps
- Smaller 2.4-inch LCD screen
- Shorter shutter speed range
- ISO to only 400 in full resolution
- 6 megapixels
- ISO to 1000
- No custom white balance
- Memory Stick Pro Duo card required for 30 fps movie mode
- Only 7 scene modes