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FYI! Last read at 08:55 on 2024/05/08.

Pentax Optio LS465 digital camera

The retail price of this camera seems to vary between €60 and €90 depending upon where you look. As my camera was a ruby pink model (looks more like magenta satin to me), it found itself on the sale table. I picked it up for just under thirty euros.

The specs - the front of the camera, and the box, proclaim that the camera offers 16 megapixels and has a 2.7 inch wide LCD and a 5× optical zoom and changeable skin.

Let's look at it from a different angle.

The back of the camera has a pleasing selection of buttons:

At the top, the W and T control the zoom. You can also zoom in (up to 10×) on previews, plus zoom out to display a useful calendar so you can go quickly to a day when a photo was taken.
Below this, the Play button to go to playback mode and look at the photos and videos that have been recorded. The red dot button is for quick access to view recording, so if you happen to see a plane crashing in front of you and you have balls of solid steel and good bladder control, you can start recording video immediately without messing around switching modes and such.
Below this is a four-way control button with an OK button in the middle. These help you navigate the menus, move around pictures (or within a picture) in playback, and in normal photo mode, these are shortcuts to common functions:
The left button is for the flash. Your flash choices are standard - off, auto, on, and on with red eye correction. It is worth mentioning that the camera contains a proper flash bulb and not a really bright LED. This means that flash pictures are generally better than those that you could achieve with mobile phones.

The top is the 'drive' setting:

This offers a self timer of two seconds, ten seconds, continuous shot, and burst shot. With the self timers, you can set a 'beep' to play every second while counting down. One of the sounds is a cat mew. Yup, I have that one. Continuous mode means that as long as the shutter button is depressed, it will keep taking photos (but you'll get no preview) and it will take about one photo per second at your chosen resolution (to a Class 4 SD card). Burst mode forces the resolution to 4 megapixels and then takes pictures at around 2-3 per second, again with no preview.

The right button is for the focus mode:

Your choice is Auto Focus (standard), macro (down to around 15cm), super macro (down to around 5cm), some sort of tracking focus, and a "distance" mode - perhaps this latter one switches to "infinity focus" similar to disposable cameras?

The bottom of the four-way hides a bewildering selection of choices. You normally get a few modes, right? Like daytime, night, sunset, and so on? Check this:


I'll walk you through: Wow. That's a lot of options.

The bottom left button is the Menu button. This is for entering the setup menus, and "cancelling" changes when in a menu or option.



There are too many options to list here, so I'll just make two observations:

This leaves the final option. The "green button". By default, this puts the camera in to a simplified "green mode" where it makes more or less all of the decisions for you. Other choices available are white balance, ISO/sensitivity, or exposure compensation. I have set mine to ISO so switching the sensitivity is a button press away.

 

Well. There are plenty of options. Now to look at it in use.

I am not sure how I would feel if I paid list price for this camera. I think that there are better models that only cost a little bit more. However the price I paid was a real bargain - and one thing is for certain: A phone attempts to be a "jack of all trades" and while a phone can capture some good photos, this camera is designed specifically to take photographs and it's a job it does well; offering an optical zoom (which already puts its capabilities far beyond that of a phone) as well as coping admirably with "difficult" conditions.

Some photos. You'll see.

I think this is the first photo I took. I was playing with the macro settings.

Yeah, the built-in frames really are this cheesy. I guess this one would be great for a mother to take photos of her daughter doing interesting stuff at school...

It deals effortlessly with super macro on a lightbulb, things that flummox lesser cameras.

And as you can see from this real-size portion of the above picture, it has absolutely nailed the focus on the central glass pillar and set the colour balance to produce a photo that actually manages to make a generic tungsten light bulb look ... beautiful.
(you can see the artefacts - look at the wire supports or around the glowing filament)

The camera's small size and self timer lend it to some unusual shots. This is from the back of the fridge!

In a nearby(ish) town a little after sunset, taken with me holding the camera and leaning against a wall. Sublime reflections on the car park. I like the colour reproduction here. The green cast on the right is from a pharmacy - in France these are always lit in vivid green neon. The bar and the pharmacy are the two places with the most ambitious exterior lighting. I wonder if this says something about the French?

A long exposure from ground level towards one of the outbuildings. That's Orion in the background. It looks better in the full sized image, scaling down has aliased away some of the stars.

The rise of a full moon. I think that's Jupiter behind, as well. My phone, by contrast, got a white dot surrounded by black.

Long exposure (night scene mode) looking down the front. It is night, there is some moonlight and the bulb is a 100W (or was it 75W?) tungsten bulb. That's it. The camera has absolutely outdone itself and delivered a lovely photograph with rich colours. The only processing that I have done is to straighten the image, as the camera was perched on a rock and not quite even. Everything else - the exposure, the colour reproduction, the everything, was down to the camera making its own decisions here. It did a great job.

And finally, I was making a pizza with a small electric oven (quick to heat up) and I saw the elements were glowing dimly. So I thought, I wonder...
Now I know.
Effortless.
This was hand-held too.

 

You have already seen some photos taken with this camera, only I didn't mention it at the time. The photos of my new phone, the "mobile office", the water tower...

 

 

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