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When you first look at the R10 you are likely to think "something looks really weird at the front of the camera". Well, in a way this is very true. The lens is mounted on a 25 degree upward angle. Want to know why? Hold your hand in the position where you would normally hold a video camera to film something - it isn't perfectly level is it? Since most people hold their video camera's about a foot or so away from their breast bone, the hand itself has roughly a 25 degree downward tilt. To compensate for this, Samsung gave the R10 lens a 25 degree upward tilt. It seems weird at first, but when you actually give it a go, it feels very natural. The lens is actually behind a glass cover on the front of the camera, which further adds to the slightly unusual look up front. Although this glass is scratch proof and designed to protect the lens itself, I still don't agree with Samsung's idea to not include a lens cap. Although it may not help much with scratch reduction, I still would like a lens cap to keep this glass clean and free of fingerprints.
Unlike some of the past Samsung flash camcorders I've reviewed here, the R10 does not have any internal memory. You must provide memory yourself via SD and SDHC supported cards. Downloading to your computer is made easy by the R10 appearing the same as a USB flash drive would when connected to your computer. The QMenu is essentially a user programmable set of four hotkeys that show up on the touch screen when the button is pressed. This gives you access to any of the camera's critical features and settings with no more than two button presses. For example, my current QMenu has a resolution button, exposure control button, back light button and focus control button. I'd like to note a few changes in this QMenu from older Samsung camera models: it's been cut down to four items instead of the old six and it is now user editable (you never used to be able to change the options in the menu). I must say that I absolutely love the ability to now modify what I have control of in the QMenu but the reduction from six items down to four means that if I'm a power user, I may still have to do a lot of menu navigation for more of my commonly used features. Of course a complete menu can be brought up at any time by using the menu button on the lower corner of the screen.
The R10 is capable of recording both high definition and standard definition movies ranging from VGA (640x480) up to 1080i/p. Audio is recorded in stereo AAC format at 48kHz. Below is a summary of all supported recording modes and the qualities they are available at. Note: SF is super-fine and N is normal when it comes to quality, and i is interleaved and p is progressive when it comes to resolutions. Still image capture quality ranges from VGA up to 12 megapixels (interpolated), the camera's native quality is 9.0 megapixels. All photos can only be taken in the super-fine quality setting. There is a flash on the front of the camera that can be set to off, auto, red-eye reduction or fill modes (quite a bit of variety for a camera designed primarily for video!) An outline of all photo quality settings and resolutions is shown below: Both video and picture modes have face detection. This means the camera will automatically sense the faces in the picture and work extra hard to make sure they all stay in focus.
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