Support Cameralabs by shopping at our partner stores or donating via Paypal
 

Follow me!
Camera Labs RSS Feed
Gordon Laing and Cameralabs on Google+
Camera Labs on Facebook
Camera Labs on Twitter

 
  Latest camera reviews

Olympus E-PM1
Nikon V1
Sony NEX-5N
Canon 100HS / 115HS
Canon 300HS / 220HS
Canon S100
GoPro HD Hero 2
Canon 510HS / 1100HS
Canon 310HS / 230HS
Canon SX150 IS
Olympus E-PL3
Canon SX40 HS
Sony NEX-C3
Panasonic GF3
Fujifilm HS20 EXR
Panasonic FZ150
Olympus E-P3
Panasonic FZ47 / FZ48
Nikon COOLPIX S9100
Sony Cyber-shot HX100V
Sony Cyber-shot HX9V
Panasonic FX77 / FX78
Canon SX230 HS
Canon EOS T3 / 1100D
Panasonic Lumix G3
Sony Cyber-shot TX10
Canon 500HS / 310HS
Nikon D5100
Sony Cyber-shot W510
Nikon COOLPIX L24
Canon PowerShot A1200
Panasonic FS18 / FH5
Canon PowerShot A800
Panasonic TZ18 / ZS8
Canon PowerShot A3300IS
Canon EOS 600D / T3i
Panasonic TZ20 / ZS10
Canon IXUS 1000/SD4500
Sony Alpha SLT-A33
Panasonic Lumix GH2
Nikon D7000
Canon PowerShot G12
Canon PowerShot S95
Panasonic Lumix LX5
Nikon D3100
Canon EOS 60D
Canon EOS 550D / T2i
Canon EOS 7D
Nikon D300s
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
Nikon D90

All reviews ....
 
 
   
 
  Best Buys: our top models
   
  Best Canon lens
Best Nikkor lens
Best Sony lens
Best budget DSLR
Best mid-range DSLR
Best semi-pro DSLR
Best point and shoot
Best superzoom
Best camera accessories
   
 



   
 



Camera Labs Forum

Any questions, comments or a great tip to share? Join our Forum and let everyone know.
   
 
  DSLR Tips



 
Support me by shopping at Amazon!
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70 Gordon Laing, November 2007
 

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70 introduction

Sony’s Cyber-shot DSC-T70 is an 8 Megapixel compact with a 3x optically-stabilised zoom lens. Announced in August 2007, it features a number of gadgets including a 3in touch-sensitive widescreen monitor and the capability to not just recognise faces, but wait until your subjects are actually smiling before taking the shot.

Like earlier Sony cameras with touch-screens, the T70 uses its monitor for almost all operations beyond the power, zoom and shutter release; it also allows you to do some fun options like tapping on the area where you’d like the camera to focus.






The new Smile Shutter mode is the logical step beyond face detection and allows you to set a threshold as to how happy your subjects have to look before the camera releases the shutter and takes the picture. A novelty perhaps, but one which could ensure no more grumpy photos – and it is optional, so you don’t have to use it.

In terms of more traditional specifications, the T70 features a 3x optical zoom lens with an equivalent range of 38-114mm. This may not zoom-out anywhere near as wide as some of the better compacts today, but on the plus-side, the T70 does its zooming entirely within its body, thereby maintaining a very slim form factor. Like many of Sony’s latest compacts, a vertically sliding and tactile front panel acts as a power switch and lens protector.

Click here for the Sony Cyber-shot T70 video tour
 

Sony’s T70 may boast gadgetry beyond most models, but enters a highly competitive market with some strong, albeit more traditionally-featured rivals. So the big questions are whether the gadgets are novelties or genuinely useful, and of course how the general performance and image quality measures-up.

We’ll reveal all in our Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70 review, putting its innovative features to the test while comparing it against the best compacts available today. And as always, we’ll give you a tour of its highlights, including a demonstration of the touch-screen and Smile Shutter features in our Sony T70 video tour.

Testing Notes

Following our convention of using default factory and best quality JPEG settings to test cameras unless otherwise stated, the T70 was set to its best quality 8M mode with Auto White Balance, Multi metering and Normal Colour mode. The Super SteadyShot anti-shake mode was enabled for all handheld shots, and disabled for tripod-based tests.


If you found this review useful, please support us by shopping below!
All words, images, videos and layout, copyright 2005-2012 Gordon Laing. May not be used without permission.

/ How we test / Best Cameras / Advertising / Camera reviews / Supporting Camera Labs