Toshiba Camileo P100 review

Jose Simpton

Toshiba's Camileo P100 is priced to compete with budget HD camcorders like the Samsung HMX-W200RP , but its smart pistol-grip design and glossy black finish make it look a class apart. It can shoot in 1080/30p, 720/60p, 720/30p or 480/30p video modes and has a 5x optical zoom. It also has 128MB of built-in storage, but you'll need to buy an inexpensive SDHC card to record any meaningful amount of video.

Controls are split between seven buttons and the touchscreen. The main menu is only available by touching the screen, which has a resistive touch interface and so requires a prod rather than a capacitive screen's caress. There are dedicated buttons for zooming and shooting both photos and video, and there's a pause button, so you can stop recording and start again without creating a new video file. A playback button lets you review previously saved footage, and there's a Share button for tagging photos and videos - when you plug the P100 into a PC you have the option to install Toshiba's software, which can convert and upload your videos to YouTube or Facebook automatically.

When shooting our test footage, we were initially impressed by its deep colours and strong contrast. However, once we looked a little closer we saw that footage appeared over-saturated and artificial-looking. Video also looked over-compressed, which led to a lack of detail - large areas of similar colour, such as pavements and the earth on the ground of a building site, turned into a smeary mess. We also weren't impressed with the electronic image stabilisation, which led to footage appearing slightly shaky. Overall quality was better overall than that from a Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc S smartphone, but it's still not a patch on Samsung's similarly-priced W200 HD. It also couldn't compete with the Samsung for low-light footage - video had a significant amount of noise and lacked detail.

The 5x optical zoom works well - the camcorder zooms in to the limit of its optics, and you have to press the zoom button again to go into the digital zoom mode. This gives you up to 128x zoom, but as with all digital zooms, this ruins quality as you're just cropping into the image - loads of detail is lost. Low-light shooting is even more disappointing. Even with the LED flash switched on, shots were speckled with noise and detail was lost.

Reviewing videos and pictures you've already taken isn't made easier by the playback interface, which is slow to respond and shows your photos and videos as tiny thumbnails which are difficult to see on the low-resolution screen.

Ultimately, the P100 flatters to deceive. Its good looks and impressive feature list are undermined by its artificial-looking image quality and clunky interface. The Samsung HMX-W200RP has better image quality, is less expensive and can shoot underwater, so it's a far better buy.

Basic Specifications

Rating

**

Recording

Optical zoom

5.0x

Digital zoom

16x

Sensor pixels

8,000,000

Widescreen mode

native

LCD screen size

3.0in

Viewfinder type

none

Video lamp

Yes

Video recording format

MPEG4

Video recording media

flash memory and SDHC

Sound

AAC 44KHz mono

Video resolutions

1,920x1,080/30p, 1,280x720/60p, 1,280x720/30p, 640x480/30p

Maximum image resolution

4608x3456

Memory slot

SD. SDHC, SDXC

Mermory supplied

none

Flash

yes

Physical

Digital inputs/outputs

USB

Analogue inputs/outputs

HDMI

Other connections

none

Battery type

Li-ion

Battery life

1h 20m

Battery charging position

USB, charger

Size

111x68x32mm

Weight

155g

Buying Information

Warranty

two years collect and return

Price

£115

Supplier

http://www.pixmania.co.uk

Details

www.toshiba-europe.com

Basic Specifications

Recording

Physical

Buying Information