Difference between revisions of "Sony Mavica CD400"

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While the earliest Mavica models from [[Sony]] used 3.5" floppy disks as a storage medium, the "CD" series adopted writable 8 cm diameter optical discs. This led to some "interesting" case styling, as Sony attempted to unify a camera and what was essentially a small Discman into a single plastic housing. The mini-CD format offered substantially more capacity than floppy disks, 156 MB using Sony's formatting<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mini_CD#Sony_Mavica Mini CD: Sony Mavica] at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page Wikipedia]</ref>.
 
While the earliest Mavica models from [[Sony]] used 3.5" floppy disks as a storage medium, the "CD" series adopted writable 8 cm diameter optical discs. This led to some "interesting" case styling, as Sony attempted to unify a camera and what was essentially a small Discman into a single plastic housing. The mini-CD format offered substantially more capacity than floppy disks, 156 MB using Sony's formatting<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mini_CD#Sony_Mavica Mini CD: Sony Mavica] at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page Wikipedia]</ref>.
  
The '''Mavica DVC-CD400''' (as it was formally known) is a 4 megapixel model from 2002 with a Carl Zeiss-branded 3x zoom lens. Opening to f/2.0 at the wide setting (and f/2.5 at the tele end), this was quite a respectable specification compared to later pocket digitals.
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The '''Mavica MVC-CD400''' (as it was formally known) is a 4 megapixel model from 2002 with a Carl Zeiss-branded 3x zoom lens. Opening to f/2.0 at the wide setting (and f/2.5 at the tele end), this was quite a respectable specification compared to later pocket digitals.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 14:32, 29 April 2011

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While the earliest Mavica models from Sony used 3.5" floppy disks as a storage medium, the "CD" series adopted writable 8 cm diameter optical discs. This led to some "interesting" case styling, as Sony attempted to unify a camera and what was essentially a small Discman into a single plastic housing. The mini-CD format offered substantially more capacity than floppy disks, 156 MB using Sony's formatting[1].

The Mavica MVC-CD400 (as it was formally known) is a 4 megapixel model from 2002 with a Carl Zeiss-branded 3x zoom lens. Opening to f/2.0 at the wide setting (and f/2.5 at the tele end), this was quite a respectable specification compared to later pocket digitals.

Notes

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