I sometimes hear from people who’ve newly acquired a digital SLR, saying they find it a hassle to continually change lenses when shooting a wide variety of subjects. Frankly, it goes with ‘SLR-territory’ (digital and film) and is the price you pay to enjoy the improved image of an interchangeable lens, reflex camera.

In reality, unless you’re very demanding and continually shoot magazine quality pictures, most times you’re better off with a fixed lens digicam with an extended zoom range … like this one.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ35

Panasonic has not indulged in a longish zoom camera before, unlike Canon, Nikon and Olympus, and its first such camera, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ35, possesses a modest 18x optical zoom that runs from 4.8-86.4mm or, in 35 SLR equivalence, 27-486mm. Say, now that’s a zoom!

Its amazingly tiny CCD measures 10.9mm in the diagonal, but is still capable of capturing a 12.1 million pixel image, leading to a maximum image size of 4000×3000 pixels.

This camera also has a feature that Panasonic has never installed in its compact range before as far as I know: it’s capable of RAW capture as well as JPEG … and of course RAW+JPEG simultaneously.

Coupled with this attractive factor, the FZ35 also shoots High Def movies with 1280 x 720 pixel resolution and stereo sound using the AVCHD Lite (MPEG-4/H.264) codec, which seems not to have been taken up by other makers.

Lite offers a considerable saving in file size: it’s half that of full AVCHD. You can also select lower movie quality settings: 848 x 480, 640 x 480 and 320 x 240 … the latter useful for Web transmission.

The FZ35, unlike many other digicams, has the ability to use the optical zoom while you’re shooting movies. The FZ35’s movie zoom operates in a gentle fashion — not jerky — and adds to the viewer enjoyment of movie clips. Another nice touch is that stills and movie shooting each have dedicated buttons.

When it comes to download time the FZ35 provides a USB 2.0 port, through which you can also export composite video and sound as well as a mini HDMI port, to which you can attach an optional lead to a High Def TV set. If you have one of the company’s VIERA TVs, you can control the camera’s playback functions with a VIERA remote control.

In their wisdom, Panasonic has simplified the optical stabiliser to two modes: off and on. I’ve always found the company’s stabiliser to be an excellent one but you may find it’s best to cancel it when the camera is on a tripod — one fights the other.

Memory: 40 MB of internal memory is useful for a short shooting spree but when you need a card you can load up an SD or SDHC, with the latter as preferred card for movie shooting; the advice is to use a Class 4 card or better.

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