|
Product Description: Equipped with the latest high-speed infrared connectivity, F100fd lets you send photos to another IrSimple camera or device in seconds without the need for a cable or PC. FinePix Wide Dynamic Range gives you the ability to explore extreme scenes and capture all the nuances of brightness and tonality. Using an aspherical lens to efficiently collect light at the focal point, the lens can deliver high-performance and phenomenal clarity of image with only a few lens elements for a more compact engineering experience. 12-Megapixels are arranged in Fuji Film's unique honeycomb pattern, which maintains high pixel numbers and enhances the light collection efficiency and light capture efficiency per pixel. Dual IS uses FinePix high sensitivity to freeze the movement of subjects and defeat motion blur, while CCD Shift Image Stabilization automatically compensates for camera shake. View and select up to 100 photos at a time in a 10x10 array of micro thumbnails. With the high resolution LCD, it is so easy to scan the micro images and find the photos you want to share with friends and family. Take the new Wheel Dial interface for a spin. Navigating modes, positions and functions has never been easier or more intuitive. With each selection, a helpful explanation of the mode or position appears on the display. It can display full-resolution photos on the LCD at a speed of 10fps. 1/1.6 Super CCD HR Sensor File Format - JPEG (EXIF Ver 2.2) Aperture - F3.3 - F9.0 (Wide) / F5.1 - F11.0 (Telephoto) Shutter Speed - 8 seconds to 1/1500 second Self-timer - 10 seconds and 2 seconds delay IR Communication IrSimple IrSS for Wireless Communication Shooting Modes - Auto, Natural Light, Natural Light & with Flash, M (Manual), Movie Portrait, Portrait Enhancer, Landscape, Sport, Night, Fireworks, Sunset, Snow, Beach, Underwater, Museum, Party, Flower, and Text Dimensions - Width 3.8 x Height 2.3 x Depth 0.9 (97.7x58.9x23.4mm
Fujifilm Finepix F100fd 12MP Digital Camera with 5x Wide Angle Dual Image Stabilized Optical Zoom Features:
- 12.1-megapixel Super CCD captures enough detail for photo-quality poster-size prints
- 5x wide-angle optical zoom lens; Dual Image Stabilization mode
- 2.7-inch, high-resolution wide-angle LCD
- Face Detection 3.0 Technology, featuring Automatic Red Eye Removal
- Stores images on xD or SD/SDHC memory cards (not included)
Customer Reviews:
- Designed by committee: I bought this because I hoped it would be an upgrade from my favorite digital camera, the Fujifilm F30. Unfortunately, it is not better overall.
The F30, which is out of production, developed something of a cult following in techno-nurd circles because it had the incredible sensitivity of ISO 3200 with low noise (speckle). Fuji accomplished this with their "Super CCD" using hexagonally packed, larger sensors for greater fill factor and the ability to capture lower light intensities. (CCD photodiodes typically operate pretty close to the quantum limit of efficiency, so there is no possible improvement except by larger pixels.) The technology was brilliant but worked well only up to about 6 megapixels for the small chip size used in pocket cameras. Unfortunately Fuji's marketing people were not as imaginative as their semiconductor team and did not know how to persuade the buying public that dim light image quality is more valuable to the average photographer than pixel count - which it is. Caving in to the pixel race, later Fuji F cameras had more but smaller pixels, giving up the extreme low noise, low light capabilities. As a result used F30's sell at high prices on eBay.
Now comes the F100, which Fuji advertises as the pocket camera to end all pocket cameras, state of the art in every way, and which is supposed to extend the low light theme to 12MP, offering ISO 3200 for full resolution and up to an astounding ISO 12,800 with pixels reduced to 3MP.
So, how does it work? I've just spent the better part of a spring day comparing the F100 images directly with my F30 under various conditions.
Unfortunately, no, they did not manage to repeal the laws of physics. At ISO 3200, the 12MP F100 with its necessarily smaller pixels gives rougher images than my 6MP F30. And as for the ISO 12,800; forget it, it's a gimmick. The images are so rough as to be useless. This irritated me; borders on deceptive advertising.
The higher pixel count does stand up better to higher magnification or cropping. In good light where it is possible to use ISO 200, the F100 gives wonderful photos which can be cropped or blown up significantly more. But for the unique higher ISO range for which people look to Fuji, the F100 is actually a bit worse in image quality. Disappointing.
Otherwise, the F100 gives the impression of a pile of disconnected features There are worthwhile features in the F100 over the F30; one is the wide angle lens, the equivalent of 28mm, uncommon on pocket cameras; another is active image stabilization which allows slower shutters. Also F100 accepts SD memory cards whereas the F30 only took oddball proprietary xD's. In my tests however, the benefit of the Wide Dynamic Range feature seemed hard to discern. The battery seems to discharge pretty quickly. The nice aluminum case of the F30 has been replaced with Chinese plastic. (By the way, I read about a "pink banding" problem with the F100 but did not observe this.)
Otherwise, some of the annoyances of the F30 remain; a strange USB connector which won't work with your non-Fuji cables. The movie mode, for me one of the really cool features of a pocket camera, has not been improved at all; it is still not possible to zoom the lens while capturing a movie. The zoom itself is too hard to control, always overshooting one way or another - Hey guys, what would be wrong with a simple manual ring to zoom the lens?
Most Japanese cameras and all Fujifilm cameras including this one are marred by byzantine, obscure, hard to remember menu systems, packed with a plethora of "scene modes" certain to be ignored by the type of user who would buy an advanced digicam in the first place. They serve no purpose except to clutter things up. The other day in a store I saw a digicam that boasted of "Fifty Scene Modes!" Fifty?? Hey folks, what happened to the idea of a POINT AND SHOOT camera??
Overall, I admire Fujifilm which is one of the world's premier imaging technology companies. But as with many large corporations, its products are designed by uneven committees; brilliant CCD people, me-too market people, and an interface team who muck things up based on false assumptions. Companies which produce really great products, like Apple, do so because one person with excellent design sense governs the whole development.
Bottom line: I was disappointed because the F100 was not a clear advance over my two year old F30. It does have a nice wide angle lens, and if you don't mind the high price you may love it. In good light the photos are superb. But overall it does not give the sense of a well integrated product. Once the dim light capabilities are compromised, the F100 is just another camera which competes with many others.
- Pro photographer loves it: I'm a professional photographer and I've owned a Fuji F10, F30, F50 and now the F100. The F50 was the only dog of that group. The F100 I feel has just as good low-light performance as my beloved F30 but with twice the resolution. You can look at my blog at http://rickleephoto.blogspot.com and click on the "Produce" tag and see that weeks #122 and up are shot with the F100 at ISO800. The color and sharpness are stunning. With the F30, I always had the camera set on minus 1/3 or 2/3 stops to avoid overexposure. I think that problem is solved on the F100. I love the extra wide-angle we have now. That really extends the usefulness of the camera.
As for the pink banding problem... I really don't want to start calling people names, but honestly, I've always found that there will be a group of people who approach photography from an "engineering" standpoint rather than an artistic one. We need the technical nerds to do tests and such, but I've never seen this problem show up in a real-world photo. I've seen a lot of stunning photos by some good photographers done with this camera and none of them suffered because of this problem. - A very good pocketable compact camera: I think overall this is one of the better compact digital cameras (that is pocketable) in its class. Other cameras that I would consider in this class are: Panasonic TZ5 and Canon SD870IS.
OK, first of all, the issue of pink banding. Out of 200+ test images that I made, I noticed 2 of them have minor pink banding, and these are shot at ISO1600. I am guessing some batches of F100fd do exhibit this problem worse than others. I've seen samples on the web where pink banding is obvious even on ISO400 and ISO800. On my ISO400 and ISO800 samples, which I took in various low lighting conditions (outdoor dusk, indoor incandescent lighting, indoor daytime in dark room), there is no noticeable pink banding. Fujifilm will release a firmware in May 08 to fix this issue, so this could end up as a non-issue in the future. For me, pink banding is not an issue since I will never use ISO1600. And I only print less than 0.01% of all my pictures, I can crop the pink banding out if necessary.
I think F100fd is a moderate improvement over F50fd. With F50fd, ISO800 has too much noise. But with F100fd, ISO800 is quite usable. In fact, I think F100fd might have the best low light performance in its class. F100fd also has a very good edge-to-edge sharpness performance in wide angle.
While I think F100fd is overall a very good compact camera, no camera is perfect. Here are some of its weaknesses:
- Overpriced. I think $299 is the fair price for this camera.
- No manual control (A/S mode). F50fd has it.
- No flash compensation. To be fair, not many compacts have it either.
- No Auto Exposure Bracketing. Panasonic TZ5 has it.
- No histogram. Useful to check over/under exposure.
- 5x zoom vs TZ5's 10x zoom.
- Controls are not user friendly.
- Short battery life. F30/F31 can shoot more than 500 pictures with one charge.
- LCD screen size. Panasonic TZ5 has a 3" and 400k resolution screen.
- Pink banding? Unless Fujifilm can fix it 100% with new firmware.
UPDATE:
After two weeks of use, here're more observations:
- 300+ shots in one charge (about 30 shots or less using flash).
- Generally fast auto focus performance, unless in low light which sometimes it hunts a little bit.
- Zooming in and out is too fast, almost have to try a few times to get to the desired zoom distance.
- Acceptable LCD performance in daylight, at noon, the LCD is still visible, so framing under bright daylight should not be a problem.
- Shot to shot time is respectable, generally about 1 to 2 second. But if flash is used, it could go up to 3 to 4 seconds.
I was contemplating getting the Panasonic TZ5 due to its superior features, but I think for now I am sticking to F100fd, and wait for the next TZ6 or TZ7. Panasonic has been improving the TZ series, so the next TZ could be a great one.
- Pink banding IS a problem: I don`t understand why people downplay the pink banding problem that is noticable not only on iso800 & above shots, but on pictures taken of high-contrast objects as well. I saved many shots to my memory card from my friend`s f100 and I am not at all satisfied! Outside pictures are great in general, but banding appears on high contrast areas!
I hope lots of people will return the camera so fuji`ll be forced to finally do something about it! We, customers should step up aginst the megapixel rate as well. The F100 with same sensor, but 6-7 megapixel and pink banding fixed would be as close to perfect as current point & shot cameras can be. It`s not right to make it look as "ah well all cameras have this problem". At least something may change this time as LOTS of people are upset with this camera, check camera forums all over. I believe massive consumer complaints may progress the industry as other manufacturers are watching the case closely. Spread the words, do your part! - Avoid this camera. Has pink banding issues.: I followed the advise of some of the others who commented on the camera and said their wasn't any pink banding issues. They are completely wrong. At ISO 400 you can definately see a pink banding issue on the left side of the image. The sad part is, depending upon the lighting, the pink banding even shows up at ISO 200.
FujiFilm has yet to acknowledge the issue which is very poor customer service. Google F100fd and pink banding if you want to read more about the issue.
It is a great camera in daylight as pictures "pop" out at you, and with little noise. It takes very clean and crisp pictures at ISO 100. If it wasn't for the pink banding issue, I would give this camera 5 stars.
|