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Nikki Echler McDonald and Carla Thornton
HP Photosmart 720
HP's gray-and-silver Photosmart 720 is built like a brick, with a
large lens and a rubber hand grip to the right. Some users may prefer the
blocky style and heavy feel-the camera weighs just over 12 ounces-but it's
overkill in a point-and-shoot model. It ships with 16MB of internal memory in
lieu of a removable memory card, but it also includes a slot for the tiny SD
memory cards.
The 3.18-megapixel camera has a mixed bag of features. It gives some
control over exposure, letting you set the white balance and exposure
compensation, and it includes a multiburst mode; but it omits core features
like scene and macro modes. Some of the menu selections are oddly placed:
Exposure settings are under the set-up menu in playback, instead of under the
shooting mode, for example. On the other hand, three buttons on top of the
camera offer instant access to the flash, the self-timer, the continuous
shooting mode, and the image-quality settings.
In overall image quality, the Photosmart 720 ranked near the top of
our point-and-shoot group. Though the 3X optical zoom felt slow and jerky, the
camera produced crisp, well-exposed images that were pleasing both on-screen
and as printed photos. The close-up of our still life looked sharp, and
outdoors the camera delivered accurate colors and highlights, with adequate
detail in the shadows. Only the shots of our mannequin, taken without the
flash, came out overexposed, with a slight yellow cast.
The HP Photosmart 720 takes sharp, well-exposed
pictures-both on-screen and in print-but for a point-and-shoot, the camera
feels a bit too large and heavy.
| Buying Information |
HP Photosmart 720
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