At first glance, the Samsung SH100 ($200) looks like a run-of-the-mill, low-priced touchscreen camera. It's built for very casual shooters, and its core specs aren't exactly mind-boggling: The SH100's 14-megapixel CCD sensor may have been an impressive feature a few years ago, but in these days of ever-inflated pixel counts, it's standard issue in the compact camera world. Same goes for its 5X optical zoom lens and 720p video recording at 30 frames per second.
2. At first glance, the Samsung SH100 ($200) looks like a run-of-the-mill, low-priced touchscreen
camera. It's built for verycasual shooters, and its core specs aren't exactly mind-boggling: The
SH100's 14-megapixel CCD sensor may have been an impressive feature a few years ago, but
in these days of ever-inflated pixel counts, it's standard issue in the compact camera world.
Same goes for its 5X optical zoom lens and 720p video recording at 30 frames per second.
The SH100 ups the ante, however, with its built-in wireless features, which include (but aren't
limited to) direct uploads from the camera to Facebook, YouTube, and other sharing services.
The most unusual wireless feature is the ability to create a peer-to-peer connection with
Samsung Galaxy S series phones, meaning that you can use a phone as a wireless remote
control and a tethered storage device for photos and video.
The sum of all these parts is hardware you'd expect in a standard-issue $200 camera, but
enhanced with innovative in-camera extras that provide great bang for the buck. The SH100
performs well in Auto mode, has well-implemented Wi-Fi features, and offers a little something
extra for anyone who owns aSamsung Galaxy S or Galaxy S II phone. Serious photographers
won't find much to like here, but it's a great option for a younger shooter.
Hardware and design
The 14-megapixel Samsung SH100 is very compact, with a 0.74-inch-deep frame that slips
comfortably into a shirt or pants pocket. One trade-off for that small size is that the camera uses
Micro SD format cards instead of the more-traditional SD Card. Another slight oddity is that the
camera's battery charges inside the camera, via a proprietary connector that you can plug into a
USB port or into the included wall charger.
The SH100's 5X optical zoom lens favors wide-angle shots, ranging from 26mm to 130mm in
35mm-film-equivalent focal lengths. The camera has digital image stabilization only, which is
generally less effective than an optical or sensor-shift stabilization system; even so, the SH100
had no problems keeping full-telephoto shots steady in my hands-on tests.
3. Many of the camera's controls reside in its touchscreen menus, leaving the SH100 with just four
physical buttons: a top-mounted power button, a shutter/zoom control, a playback button, and a
back-mounted home button that takes you to the camera's main menus.
The SH100's touchscreen interface is straightforward and easy to use, with four scrollable pages
of phone-style icons that give you access to shooting modes, playback options, wireless features,
image-editing tools, and special effects. The in-camera options are plentiful and clearly labeled,
but four pages of icons is a bit much; I would have preferred to see Samsung group like-minded
features in folders to reduce the number of navigation swipes necessary.
The camera's 3-inch touchscreen also takes a couple of presses to register some selections, and
it might prove problematic for people with thick fingers. Because it's a resistive touchscreen, you
sometimes have to press it harder than you expect. What's more, entering e-mail addresses,
wireless network passwords, and other login information while using the camera's wireless
features can really test your patience. There's no option to reveal passwords as you type them,
either, meaning that you fly blind when inputting text, and your margin of error is very small for
such a touchy interface.
The Samsung SH100 is incredibly small and light, and the camera's plastic body and resistive
touchscreen give it a toylike feel. Nevertheless, it feels durable enough to withstand the daily
wear-and-tear associated with being tossed in a bag or in a pocket.
Shooting modes and features
The SH100 certainly gives you your money's worth when it comes to fancy in-camera features.
Most of these extras are geared toward younger users: in-camera effects, special overlays, and
fancy playback options.
Like most other cameras in its price range, it offers common automated shooting modes such as
Smart Auto for both stills and video, six scene selection options, and a Program mode for
tweaking ISO settings, white balance, metering modes, and other presets. The SH100 shoots
720p high-definition video at 30 fps in MP4 format.
In the camera's dedicated macro mode, you can nab a clearly focused shot of an up-close
subject even when you're only about 3 inches away. And though there's no explicit manual mode,
you have limited manual control over the camera's shutter and aperture settings in the SH100's
Night mode. In Night mode, shutter speeds range from 1 to 16 seconds, while aperture settings
range from F3.3 to F9.4 in wide-angle mode and from F5.9 or F16.7 in full telephoto.
4. The SH100 exceeds the offerings of most (if not all) cameras in its class with its Smart Filter
modes (which mimic everything from a tilt-shift lens to scratchy sepiatone film), its in-camera
editing options, and its wireless features.
The SH100's Magic Frame feature lets you snap a shot that appears on a virtual billboard, an
old-school TV set, or a fake magazine cover. It's ridiculous—but fun to play around with.
Night mode has a few manual options.
Magic Frame: Ridiculous and awesome
5. Magic Frame: Awesome and ridiculous
The camera's Photo Editor option permits you to adjust image brightness, saturation, and
contrast after you take a photo, saving a copy of the retouched image. You can also apply the
SH100's Smart Filter options after you take a photo, in case you'd like to retain the original,
untreated image. While playing back images, you can crop them (by selecting points on the
touchscreen), rotate image orientation, and resize photos. All in all, the SH100's image-editing
options are impressive for a low-priced camera.
Like the Magic Frame feature, the camera's playback options are geared toward teens and
tweeners, providing a few unique extras for viewing photos in-camera. The Magazine option lets
you flip through a virtual travel album, wedding album, or party-themed album of your photosyou
also get "3D album" playback mode, and standard slideshow and playback modes.
Considering the camera's fun features, cellphone-style interface, and almost toy-like ultraslim
body, the SH100 should appeal to kids and casual snapshooters. The camera's wireless sharing
features increase its convenience for fans of social networking.
Wireless features
The SH100's coolest wireless feature is also its most limited. By downloading a free Remote
Viewfinder app and installing it on a Samsung Galaxy S II or Samsung Galaxy S phone, you can
use the phone's touchscreen to view a real-time feed from the camera's lens, snap photos by
remote control, and adjust the camera's flash and resolution settings. You don't even need to be
within range of a Wi-Fi hotspot to take advantage of the peer-to-peer app; it forms a direct
connection between the phone and the camera. Here's a video run-through of the SH100's
Remote Viewfinder app.
Samsung SH100's remote viewfinder app
6. Though the SH100 has built-in Wi-Fi, don't expect to use the camera as a Web-surfing device.
The camera's wireless capabilities are limited to sharing and file-backup services; it doesn't
include a full browser.
If you can successfully enter text on the Samsung SH100's somewhat finicky touchscreen, the
camera has some of the best built-in wireless features we've seen this side of a cell phone. You
can send your photos as e-mail attachments directly from the phone; as long as you have an
easily accessible wireless access point without too many encryption parameters to enter into the
camera, it works quickly and without a hitch. The SH100 also lets you post your photos and
videos to sites such as Facebook, Photobucket, Picasa, YouTube, and Samsung's own sharing
site by uploading them directly from the camera.
Samsung SH100: Web-upload support
Samsung SH100: Touchscreen keyboard
The SH100 also lets you stream or share content to compatible devices on a home network via
its AllShare feature, and it can connect to other SH100 cameras for file sharing over a Wi-Fi
network.
The various wireless features are surprising on a couple of fronts:We're not used to seeing so
many innovative extras in a $200 camera; and they work much better than expected. We've
tested a lot of cameras that have built-in Wi-Fi capabilities, and aside from its sometimes-touchy
touchscreen interface, the SH100 offers perhaps the best in-camera Wi-Fi experience we've
seen to date.
Performance, image quality, and video quality
In our lab's subjective testing for image and video quality, the Samsung SH100 continued to
surprise us by posting some outstanding scores for a camera in its price range.
The camera's flash was a bit too powerful in our flash-exposure test, resulting in a lower score for
exposure quality. But the SH100 earned scores of Very Good for color accuracy, sharpness, and
lack of distortion in our tests, all of which are assess photos taken with the flash turned off. The
SH100 earned an overall imaging score of Very Good, and we recommend using it without the
flash if at all possible.
7. The SH100 didn't fare as well in our video testing, mostly due to some stronger-than-normal
contrast in our bright-light test scene and some very noticeable noise and grain in our low-light
test footage. It earned an overall video score of Good, as it did for audio capture through its top-
mounted microphone. All in all, this camera is a very good all-around performer for its modest
price.
Here are the test clips used for our lab's subjective video tests. Select "720p" from the drop-down
menu in each player to view the highest-resolution video footage.
(Video URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJniMoN6Yk0&feature=player_embedded)