Introduction
My nephew got married last June and we wanted to record the happy event ourselves. My brother said he would get me a camera to take some snaps with and after the wedding I could keep the camera for my own personal use. I had taken photos with a big Nikon previously this produced excellent photos it was not a digital and used expensive film and processing technology so I was interested to compare to two. The Nikon was at my mums house so I could not use it on the day.
The Kodak CX7300 came in a smart box which has the orange colour usual with Kodak products. The camera looked very small when I opened the box I wondered if it would do the job. At 150g it is much lighter than my previous Nikon. I wondered if my brother new what he was doing. It slipped into my jacket pocket easily as off to the wedding I went. Compared to another camera I had, a flat one in the early 90s, it seemed fairly large the picture quality on that camera was terrible another cause for concern? The Kodak felt nice with a plastic shiny body nothing like the big black Nikon I had used previously it also seemed a bit flimsy. Not having time to read all the instructions as the wedding had begun I started to use it.
Using it
The Kodak CX7300 is easy to use aimed at beginners. The getting started leaflet provided me with simple picture instructions. I put two small AA batteries in the camera and started clicking away. A more detailed user guide is provided in a lot of different languages. Taking pictures was easy. The camera has an automatic built-in flash. Using the standard viewfinder or the cameras screen if the picture was not good I deleted right away so still have room for more photos. There is a "review" button, four arrow buttons, a "delete" button and an "OK" button. The cameras built in memory held 21 pictures on the setting it came since the I have changed the setting and it will now take 67 I did this when transferring the photos to my PC. Additional memory cards can increase this capacity with up to 64MB available. I also used the camera to take a 30 second video stream this does not have sound however.
Quality of Photos
Picture quality was excellent and the pictures are huge when the standard setting is used. The 3.2 megapixel resolution is perfect. The resolution prints out perfectly on photographic papers and is so good it was a shock. The big Nikon I had been using previously was made to look totally out of date. The photos actually are that much better.
Software
Kodak Easy share software that comes with the camera allows easy down load into a PC. I said to my brother make sure you get one with a USB cable and it was supplied with the camera. The software makes it simple for me to store my photographs crop them and it automatically places them in a dated folder, but you can of course set up your own filing system. Its all dead easy.
Power
As I said the camera is battery powered by two AA sized batteries. I am careful about switching on/off to save them. Rechargeable batteries will be useful if it is used a lot two batteries come with it they lasted for the wedding and a bit longer. When they go the camera will just not work properly.
Overall
I as an occasional photographer was amazed at how good this camera was this camera is a major advance on any I had used previously. It was what I needed and at a price that is excellent value considering the Nikon was £500 fifteen years ago and is not in the same league as far as convenience ease of use and quality of pictures go. I have since sold the Nikon for £20 on e bay the buyer thought he got a bargain but it is now a museum piece. The Kodak can be used by kids its that good. If you take a lot of photos it can be updated to 64MB which would allow for hundreds to be taken. The Kodak CX 7300 is recommend if you have a PC and want a cheap camera for every day snapping no need to worry about film quality it even has a timer if you want everyone in on the picture.