Nikon Coolpix S70 (red/red)
Manufacturer: Nikon Inc. Part number: 26189
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- Specifications
- Product series
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- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- The Nikon Coolpix S70 has a top-notch touch-screen interface and eye-catching design, but you're definitely paying for them.
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CNET editors' review
Nikon Coolpix S70 (red/red) price range: $0.00 - $389.95
- Reviewed by: Joshua Goldman
- Reviewed on: 10/28/2009
- Released on: 10/29/2009
The good: Zippy, well executed touch-screen interface; great tap-and-shoot feature; attention-getting design.
The bad: Leisurely performance; battery charging done in camera might bother some; tricky to hold.
The bottom line: The Nikon Coolpix S70 has a top-notch touch-screen interface and eye-catching design, but you're definitely paying for them.
The Nikon Coolpix S70 is an impressive leap forward in design and functionality from its predecessor, the S60. That camera, while it had an excellent design, had a touch-screen LCD that was occasionally frustrating to use; that's not great considering its operation was nearly all touch-based. The S70's OLED screen is not only bright and beautiful, but also very responsive, allowing for a few cool new features along with improvements to older ones. It's a little slow for shooting much more than portraits and landscapes, and its photos are merely very good for a point-and-shoot--which is hard to swallow given its price. But if you love having a touch screen and don't mind paying for it, the S70 is a lot of fun.
| Key specs | Nikon Coolpix S70 |
| Price (MSRP) | $399.99 |
| Dimensions (WHD) | 3.8x2.4x0.8 inches |
| Weight (with battery and media) | 5.7 ounces |
| Megapixels, image sensor size, type | 12 megapixels, 1/2.3-inch CCD |
| LCD size, resolution/viewfinder | 3.5-inch OLED, 288K dots/None |
| Lens (zoom, aperture, focal length) | 5x, f3.9-5.8, 28-140mm (35mm equivalent) |
| File format (still/video) | JPEG/Motion JPEG (.AVI) |
| Highest resolution size (still/video) | 4,000x3,000 pixels/640x480 at 30fps |
| Image stabilization type | Optical and electronic |
| Battery type, rated life | Lithium ion rechargeable, 200 shots |
| Storage type | SD/SDHC |
Available in four color combinations, the S70 is an attractive, slim camera that's easily slipped into a pants pocket or small bag. On its front is a thin metal panel covering its internal wide-angle lens with a 5x zoom. Slide down the cover and the camera turns on. The only button is the shutter release and, well, it's not even necessary.
Nikon decided to take its Touch AF option a step further by giving you the option to use it as a shutter release as well. Select Touch Shutter from the menu and you can tap on your subject and the S70 will focus and shoot. It works so well that you can keep the camera steady by shooting with both hands and just tap with any finger that can reach your subject. If you want to use the actual shutter button, you can set the touch control for focus and exposure or to select a subject for the tracking AF.
At the top left of the screen is an icon for your shooting mode; tap it and you can quickly switch to another mode. Directly below it is a Play icon for reviewing photos and movies (the S70 records HD-quality video, but the optical zoom can't be used while recording). Swipe gestures work smoothly for flipping back and forth through your shots, and you can use pinch gestures to zoom in and out. In the lower left of the screen are icons for selecting a touch AF mode and pulling up all mode-specific shooting options. The right side has the onscreen zoom control (which works well this time around, though I'd still prefer a physical rocker or switch). There's also a Menu icon for accessing the rest of the camera's setting menus as well as the shooting modes. I'd say all these icons get in the way of framing shots, but because it's a wide-screen LCD, there are gutters on the left and right sides when using the camera's full resolution. If you want to use the full screen to frame shots, you'll need to shoot in a wide-screen aspect ratio, which drops photos to an 8-megapixel resolution.
Since the entire back is the screen it can be somewhat tricky to get a good grip on the S70. This is made more difficult by the placement of the lens high on the front left. Many of my test shots have a finger or shadow of a finger in them. You just have to be very careful and pay attention or you're going to be doing a lot of cropping. Another small design issue is the cover of the microUSB port for charging, transferring photos and movies to a computer, and AV out to a TV or monitor. It's difficult to open and sort of flimsy considering the cost of the camera and how often you'll need to lift it. The battery charges in camera--by wall outlet or USB port--so if you want to take more than one battery with you for a day of shooting (and you'll want to get a second battery), you'll have to do a little planning ahead with your charging or buy an external charger.
| General shooting options | Nikon Coolpix S70 |
| ISO sensitivity (full resolution) | Auto, 80, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1,600 |
| White balance | Auto, Manual, Daylight, Incandescent, Fluorescent, Cloudy, Flash |
| Recording modes | Auto, Easy Auto, Scene, Movie |
| Focus area modes | Center AF, Touch AF, Touch Tracking AF, Macro |
| Metering | Matrix |
| Color effects | Standard, Vivid, Black & White, Sepia, Cyanotype (in Playback only) |
| Burst mode shot limit (full resolution) | 6 photos |
Shooting modes on the S70 are aimed squarely at snapshooters. The Auto mode gives you the most control with selections for ISO, white balance, exposure compensation, and autofocus type. You can also pick drive modes: single shot, continuous, Best Shot Selector, and Multishot 16. Best Shot Selector fires off up to 10 frames and then saves the sharpest image, while Multishot 16 compiles a sequence of 16 shots and puts them all in a grid on one photo. There are 15 scene modes with nothing out of the ordinary, as well as Easy Auto, Nikon's automatic scene-recognition mode. What is unique is with some of the scene modes is that you get an onscreen slider for modifying results, for example, boosting or reducing color in Macro or exposure in Portrait. The latter mode also uses Nikon's new Skin Softening component for smoothing skin tones.
Performance for the S70 is below average for an ultracompact at its price. It takes two seconds to wake up and shoot. Subsequent shots will leave you waiting an average of 2.1 seconds between them, jumping to 2.7 seconds if you use the flash. Shutter lag is noticeable in good lighting conditions at 0.6 second; in dim lighting it takes 1 second to focus and capture. The S70 has a full-resolution continuous shooting speed of 0.4 frames per second. With these numbers, it's definitely more suited to portraits and landscapes than shooting anything in motion.
The photo quality from the S70 is very good for a snapshot camera, but it is disappointing if you're going strictly by price. Snapping photos below ISO 200 is where it's at its best, producing reasonably sharp photos with good fine detail. Its photos are still fairly good at ISO 400, but at ISO 800 and higher there's noticeable color shifting, which is a shame since detail is still decent. The camera lets you limit the auto ISO range to either 80-200 or 80-400. If you're in daylight or bright conditions, I recommend locking it down to 80-200. Again, it did perform well through ISO 400, but it's at its best below ISO 200. It can shoot at full resolution up to and including a sensitivity of ISO 1,600, but the results don't look good in low-light conditions.
Its colors are not terribly accurate, but are nonetheless pleasing and reasonably natural. Exposure was generally OK, though clipped highlights were common, as they are with most compact cameras. The white balance presets worked well, but the auto white balance leans toward warm. For a 28mm-equivalent wide-angle lens, the S70 has no discernible barrel or pincushion distortion at the camera's widest or longest lens positions, respectively. Chromatic aberration in high-contrast areas of photos was a fairly regular occurrence. The blue/purple fringe is easily seen in prints of 8x10 inches or larger, but if you're viewing pictures at smaller sizes on a computer screen or printing at sizes below 8x10, you'll probably never notice.
Its video quality is very good and on par with other cameras in its class. However, there's only digital zoom while recording.
The Nikon Coolpix S70 will certainly turn heads with its flashy design, slick touch-screen interface, and internal wide-angle 5x zoom lens. If you're after $400 worth of photo quality and performance though, those aspects of the S70 fall short of the rest of the package.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Time to first shot | Typical shot-to-shot time (flash) | Typical shot-to-shot time | Shutter lag (dim) | Shutter lag (typical) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Find out more about how we test digital cameras.
User reviews
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Disappointing. I was looking for HIGH quality pictures.
by fmzamoranod on December 12, 2009
Pros: Its looks and features and functions are awesome.
It looks sleek and fancy. The whole user interface with a touch screen is just superb.
Good speed, easy to use, very intuitive.
In the 'pretty and easy to use' department.. Nikon got it right.Cons: The quality of pictures is not what I expected. I am getting a similar quality from my 5+ years old 3MP camera, the one I was trying to replace.
Summary: By no means I am a professional photographer. I am merely an ?end user? that was looking for a high quality point and shoot camera that would get me ?clear? ...
Summary: By no means I am a professional photographer. I am merely an ?end user? that was looking for a high quality point and shoot camera that would get me ?clear? pictures all the time.
While in many situations it got good pictures (good? only) in others the quality was definitely below an acceptable mark. Out of focus or ?granular? pictures.
I did not buy a $99 because I was looking for high quality, in particular for the 'Images'.
Its looks are great, and its features and functions are just awesome. Nikon just needs to get its lenses/focusing engine right.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Worst Nikon Product I have ever purchased
by kteslia on December 19, 2009
Pros: It is a 'cool' camera with features like the touch screen, making it 'iPod' or 'iPhone' like in the ability to flip pics and truly point, touch and shoot. Large megapixel count and optical zoom SHOULD capture great pics.
Cons: I have had compact digital's since they were first introduced. This is by far and away the worst image for the megapixel count that this camera is supposed to have. Might be a bad camera, but Nikon doesn't care.
Summary: Compact digital cameras are point and shoot. Any one that wants the features of a digital SLR should buy a digital SLR. My experience with this camera using it as ...
Summary: Compact digital cameras are point and shoot. Any one that wants the features of a digital SLR should buy a digital SLR. My experience with this camera using it as a point and shoot is that the picture quality is extremely grainy and clarity of pics are poor. This is my experience brand new out of the box. Thinking that there my be a fault in the software I contact Nikon customer service, they suggest a number of different shooting modes, which improves the quality marginally and finally tell me to send it in for service. I bought a brand new camera and I don't want service. I want a brand new Camera. The quality of the Nikon name no longer carries the same clout and high standard it once did. My advise to anyone buying a digital compact is DO NOT BUY online, go to the store try the camera and buy it if you are satisfied with the picture quality. I am basically going to give this camera to one of my kids and restart the whole process (excluding Nikon from the decision tree).
1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Worst Camera I've Ever Seen or Used
by mikefleh on January 9, 2010
Pros: Takes great pictures of your finger - the camera cannot be held in a way that will avoid your finger
Cons: Picture quality is the worst I have ever seen - no way to get a good image -
Summary: This camera is not capable of taking a quality image. It is also impossible to hold this camera without having your finger in the field of the lens. It also ...
Summary: This camera is not capable of taking a quality image. It is also impossible to hold this camera without having your finger in the field of the lens. It also takes too long to focus - you never get the picture you thought you were taking. I'm very upset I spent $400 for this camera.
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Junk but would make a colorful paper weight.
by markinredding on December 26, 2009
Pros: Nice touch screen
Cons: Although nice looking the camera is incapable of taking a sharp picture even at 12.1 meg setting! I have taken Millions of pictures and this is the worst excuse for a camera I have ever used. I get superior shots from a $5 disposable!
Summary: Consumer fraud comes to mind, it's going back for a refund.
Summary: Consumer fraud comes to mind, it's going back for a refund.
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Good specs, poor performance.
by HOME_n_OREGON on January 13, 2010
Pros: touch screen, pretty design.
Cons: Flimsy engineering, poor quality pics, lens location, camera starts when not expected, forget the video.
Summary: my other camera is a Nikon D50, DSLR, 6.1 MP,4 years old. I took both still and video. Stills were fuzzy, not sharp like i expected. Video was ...
Summary: my other camera is a Nikon D50, DSLR, 6.1 MP,4 years old. I took both still and video. Stills were fuzzy, not sharp like i expected. Video was similar, did not perform in a well gym. Colors were not true. Lots of red in the pictures. Did not handle lighting variations well.
0 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Stay away from this camera. Waste of time and money.
by CameraProCa on December 21, 2009
Pros: Can't think of any. Important caution in the book that you will read after you try to plug in the battery, that tells you that incorrect battery insertion will cause damage to the camera. Nice feature.
Cons: Terrible lens placement, incomprehensible icons and elaborate features that you will never use. Easy to lock into a non-usable condition requiring that you turn the camera off and then on.
Summary: Stay away from this camera. The touch screen "feature" is a total waste. Poor photo resolution. Seemingly strange computer controlled usage of the flash. Poor control over the zoom feature. ...
Summary: Stay away from this camera. The touch screen "feature" is a total waste. Poor photo resolution. Seemingly strange computer controlled usage of the flash. Poor control over the zoom feature. Very slow in response. You have to keep the camera on the mark for seconds or you get the smear effect as the camera has to think about what it's seeing, guage the distance, correct the focus and then approve the photo taking process. Overall the worst camera I've seen.
0 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Nikon Inc.
- Part number: 26189
- Description: Stylish 12.1 mega-pixel multi-touch screen camera with high-quality 3.5-inch clear color organic LED monitor, high-definition movie recording and a host of automatic functions that make it easy to achieve fantastic results. Tremendous fun to use, operation is both quick and intuitive: you only need to touch your subject on the screen to take a picture and the multi-touch technology means you can use two fingers at once to scroll through your results. The extra-large and incredibly clear 3.5-inch OLED monitor enhances both shooting and playback, while the ultra-slim body offers exceptional take-anywhere portability. The Coolpix S70 is a great way to discover the magic of touch-screen photography.
General
- Product Type Digital camera - Compact
- Width 3.8 in
- Depth 0.8 in
- Height 2.4 in
- Weight 4.9 oz
- Enclosure Color Red and dark red
Main Features
- Resolution 12.1 megapixels
- Color Support Color
- Optical Sensor Type CCD
- Total Pixels 12,390,000 pixels
- Effective Sensor Resolution 12,100,000 pixels
- Light Sensitivity ISO 80, ISO 100, ISO 200, ISO 400, ISO 800, ISO 1600, ISO 3200 (3Mpix), ISO 6400 (3Mpix), ISO auto (80-200), ISO auto (80-400), ISO auto (80-800)
- Digital Zoom 4 x
- Shooting Modes Frame movie mode
- Image Stabilizer Optical
- Image stabilizer feature Optical stabilization helps prevent blurry pictures, especially for handheld cameras at slow shutter speeds or when using high optical zoom.
- Exposure Modes Program, Automatic
- Face Detection Yes
- White Balance Presets, Automatic
- Still Image Format JPEG
- TV Tuner None
Memory / Storage
- Supported Flash Memory SD Memory Card
- Integrated Memory 20 MB
- Floppy Drive None
- Image Storage JPEG 4000 x 3000, JPEG 3264 x 2448, JPEG 2592 x 1944, JPEG 2048 x 1536, JPEG 1024 x 768, JPEG 640 x 480, JPEG 3968 x 2232
Camera Flash
- Camera Flash Built-in flash
- Flash Modes Auto mode, Fill-in mode, Slow synchro, Flash OFF mode, Red-eye reduction
- Red Eye Reduction Yes
Lens System
- Type Zoom lens - 5 mm - 25 mm - F/3.9-5.8
- Focal Length 5 mm - 25 mm
- Focal Length Equivalent to 35mm Camera 28 - 140 mm
- Focus Adjustment Automatic
- Auto Focus TTL contrast detection
- Min Focus Range 11.8 in
- Macro Focus Range 3cm
- Lens Aperture F/3.9-5.8
- Optical Zoom 5 x
- Zoom Adjustment Motorized drive
Additional Features
- Self Timer Yes
- Additional Features Tap control, USB charging, Face detection, Audio recording, Date/time stamp, Touch-screen control, D-Lighting technology, In-camera red-eye fix, 720p HD movie recording, Dual image stabilization, Face-priority AF function, Scene Detection Technology, Smile Detection technology, Motion Detection Technology
Viewfinder
- Viewfinder Type None
Display
- Type OLED display - OLED - 3.5 in - Color
- Display Form Factor Built-in
- Display Format 288,000 pixels
Digital Player (Recorder)
- Type None
Microphone
- Type Microphone - Built-in
- Microphone Operation Mode Mono
Connections
- Connector Type 1 x USB, 1 x Composite video/audio output
- Expansion Slot(s) 1 x SD Memory Card
System Requirements for PC Connection
- Peripheral Devices USB port, CD-ROM drive
Miscellaneous
- Included Accessories Carrying strap
- Cables Included USB cable, A/V cable
Power
- Power Device Power adapter - External
Battery
- Supported Battery Nikon EN-EL12
- Supported Battery 1 x Li-ion rechargeable battery ( Included )
Product series
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Manufacturer: Nikon Inc.
Specs: Ultracompact, 12.1 megapixels, 5 x, 3.5 in OLED display
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Nikon Coolpix S70 (champagne/light brown)
Manufacturer: Nikon Inc.
Specs: Ultracompact, 12.1 megapixels, 5 x, 3.5 in OLED display
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Nikon Coolpix S70 (black/black)
Manufacturer: Nikon Inc.
Specs: Ultracompact, 12.1 megapixels, 5 x, 3.5 in OLED display
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Nikon Coolpix S70 (champagne/beige)
Manufacturer: Nikon Inc.
Specs: Ultracompact, 12.1 megapixels, 5 x, 3.5 in OLED display
Accessories
Manufacturer info
- Nikon Inc.
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Nikon Inc. products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.nikonusa.com/
- Address:
1300 Walt Whitman Road, Melville, NY 11747-3064 - Phone: 1-631-547-4200








