Digital camera - 10.1 Mpix - optical zoom: 3 x - supported memory: MMC, SD - black More Product Details
492 reviews
January, 2009
We have analyzed the reviews for the Casio Exilim EX-Z1000 using our BETA review analysis. These are our findings: The Casio Exilim EX-Z1000 is good. Despite reservations with the focus and noisy iso performance, people like the user interface, large display, and nifty design. If you can overlook the focus and iso performance, give this digital camera some consideration.
fantastic build quality, exceptional design, fantastic display, outstanding features, first-class memory cards, outstanding photos, fantastic price, brilliant resolution, fantastic user interface, outstanding video mode.
terrible focus, really bad iso performance.
Please note: The ratings above are generated using our BETA automatic review analysis and may contain errors.
Great interface; responsive shutter.
Overprocessed images; poor low-light shots.
The Casio Exilim EX-Z1000 is sleek and easy to use, but noisy photos and mixed performance hold it back.
A 10-megapixel follow up to the 8-megapixel Casio Exilim EX-Z850, the Exilim EX-Z1000 is more than just a resolution bump in Casio's Exilim Z-series compact cameras. It's more of a fork in the road; for about the same price, the Casio Exilim...
Casio's parade of metal-clad, ultra-compact snapshot cameras in the Exilim line has culminated in the Exilim EX-Z1000, a 10.
Durable metal body, Widescreen LCD, Very compact, Fast burst mode with flash, Ability to save 999 custom modes
Poor image quality, Lack of manual modes, Poor seals against dust and dirt, 8 MB of internal memory is too small to be useful
The EX-Z1000 is not the leading camera its specs suggest it might be. It demonstrates why other manufactures haven't made 10-megapixel ultra-compact cameras: 1) they can't get good image quality out of such small sensors; 2) snapshooters don't need that m...
With digital compact cameras now passing the 10MP threshold, we decided to put the top five models to the test in order to help you determine which one may be right for you.
The 10.1-megapixel Casio Exilim EX-Z1000 (street $290) is the biggest member of the Exilim tribe in pure pixel power, but what do you get for all those extra pixels that you don't get in the 8MP EX-Z850 and 6MP EX-Z600 and S600? Casio Exilim...
It seems like a simple sell: a 10.1-megapixel digital camera now available for less than $300. However, the Casio Exilim EX-Z1000 proves digital cameras are about more than just resolution. The images it captures are lackluster at best
For starters, the colors are inaccurate with oversaturated and exaggerated blues and greens. Although colors are recognizable, they differ wildly from the original, lending a cartoon-like appearance to some subjects. Despite the high resolution, the image...
The Casio EX-Z1000, which was first introduced in April as the only compact camera on the market with at least 10 mega pixels. It is now available in stores retailing at around $370. It has a number of great features including over 35 scene modes, much mo...
Just when you thought the megapixel war was over, the Casio EXILIM ZOOM EX-Z1000 offers a whopping 10 megapixel resolution from a 1/1.8"-type CCD sensor, coupled to Casio's proprietary EXILIM Engine image processor. Sensitivity ranges from ISO 100 to 400...
Digital ZoomAs frustrating as the 3x zoom was, the Casio EX-Z1000's digital zoom wasn't bad. The Casio EX-Z1000 couples its sensor to an EXILIM-branded 3x optical zoom lens with a fairly standard equivalent focal length range of 38 to 114mm -- a...
Award: Recommended!
Announced back in April, the Casio EX-Z1000 was the first compact to break the 10 megapixel barrier, though it was soon followed by a cascade of models featuring what we presume to be the same (Sony) 10.3MP 1/1.8-inch CCD sensor. Headline-grabbing double...
Excellent resolution and good edge-to-edge detail, Excellent results at ISO 50 and 100, Slim all-metal body, Superb build and finish, Easy to use, Well designed control and menu system, Very fast startup, focus, shutter lag, Lots of scene modes and some i...
Noisy at ISO 400+, almost unusable at ISO 800, High Sensitivity (up to ISO 3200) mode very very low resolution (pixel-binning), Misleading 'image stabilization' mode simply increases the ISO, Noise reduction starts to remove low contrast detail at ISO 200...
Casio was the company that first gave the world a 'consumer' digital camera, way back in 1995 (when most of the big names were still convinced film would live forever), and since the launch of the Exilim range in 2002 the brand has become synonymous with...
Announced back in April, the Casio EX-Z1000 was the first compact to break the 10 megapixel barrier, though it was soon followed by a cascade of models featuring what we presume to be the same (Sony) 10.3MP 1/1.8-inch CCD sensor. Headline-grabbing...
The Casio Exilim EX-Z1000 is a capable point-and-shoot ultra-compact digital camera which produces high-resolution 10 megapixel images. Its image quality would be quite good if it was not for excessive noise and chromatic aberrations. After all, colors ar...
Sharp images, Nicely saturated colors, Good exposure accuracy, Low noise below ISO 200, Very fast and responsive, Decent LCD visibility, Flash continuous mode takes 3 shots in under 1s, Good build quality and finish
High image noise starting at ISO 200, Frequent chromatic aberrations, Some corner softness, Barrel distortion near wide angle, Nearly useless high-sensitivity modes, LCD blanks during continuous shooting, Battery charged in camera using docking station, V...
The bottom line is that the Casio Z1000 can be quite pleasing in bright outdoor conditions but equally poor under dimmer light.
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