Hands-On, Olympus

##AUTHORSPLIT##<--->

Olympus

Seems that everybody from George Lucas to the average amateur photographer is talking about 'digital photography' these days. With the arrival of the Olympus D-620L Digital Camera, we began to understand why. Versatile and easy to use, this camera is loaded with features and, as we soon discovered, its abilities are many.

As simple to use as any standard film camera, the D-620L's wide array of capabilities make it stand out. It has an awesome 3x zoom lens system that can bring distant subjects surprisingly close. Exposure, flash and focus can be adjusted automatically or manually. A built-in LCD screen lets you preview images instantly. If the image is not to your liking, a simple erase function eliminates it. The camera can also fire off a series of five shots at any resolution in less than two seconds, with the burst-shooting mode.

Once taken, the JPEG images can be downloaded directly to a computer. There are three levels of image quality. On the 8MB card, 8 shots can be stored at SHQ mode, 24 shots at HQ mode and 99 at SQ. In short, we found the Olympus D-620L to be a very good camera. The image quality is great (The photo above was taken by T.H.E. staff using the D-620L) and the functions are very easy to use, even for users averse to actually reading the manual. The 12-second timer is handy, as is the great zoom capability.

Also from Olympus, we received the ES-10 Parallel Scanner. Once again, this unit is as easy-to-use as it is functional. Because it scans film directly, from slides, 35mm film negatives or APS film cartridges, it produces high-resolution 3.8 megapixel images without the loss of detail that often results from scanning photographs.

It scans all common color or black and white 35mm films, negative or positive, mounted or strip negative. A preview mode allows you to make adjustments to the exposure bias, color balance and focus, tweaking the image to your liking before actually scanning it.

Overall we found the Olympus ES-10 to be very good at what it d'es. The quality of the scanned images says it all, really. They come through with crisp resolution and vivid color, ready to be used in electronic slide shows, classroom presentations, newsletters, Web-publishing or any other place you may need them. Olympus, Melville, NY, (800) 622-6372, www.olympus.com.

-Jim Schneider
[email protected]

Featured

  • glowing crystal ball with network connections

    Call for Opinions: 2026 Predictions for Education IT

    How will the technology landscape in education change in the coming year? We're inviting our readership to weigh in with their predictions, wishes, or worries for 2026.

  • open laptop with data streams

    OpenAI Launches AI-Powered Web Browser

    OpenAI has unveiled ChatGPT Atlas, a standalone browser that places ChatGPT at the heart of everyday web activity. This release represents a major expansion of the company's efforts to reshape how users search, browse, and complete tasks online.

  • robot brain with various technology and business icons

    Google Cloud Study: Early Agentic AI Adopters See Better ROI

    Google Cloud has released its second annual ROI of AI study, finding that 52% of enterprise organizations now deploy AI agents in production environments. The comprehensive survey of 3,466 senior leaders across 24 countries highlights the emergence of a distinct group of "agentic AI early adopters" who are achieving measurably higher returns on their AI investments.

  • laptop screen displays a grid of educational icons including a document, video, textbook, interactive buttons, graph, and a central gear symbol labeled AI

    AI-Powered Teaching Platform Provides Personalized Recommendations, Resources

    Ed tech company Brisk Teaching has introduced Brisk Next, and AI-powered platform for planning, creating, and delivering instruction.