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The Z308 is equipped with a 1.3 megapixel CMOS main camera and a VGA resolution CMOS sub camera. You can take pictures from 1152x864 to 176x144 pixel resolution. The usual color effects, frames, and shooting modes are all available. The relatively advance settings such as white balance and ISO setting (from 100 to 800 or auto) are also in place. As you would have expected from a simple CMOS module, the camera is only average. Digital noise is especially apparent in darker shooting conditions, and the external LED flash is not much of an improvement from previous models. Unlike most Japanese phones, the shutter sound can be turned off indirectly by setting the phone to silent mode. The external OLED screen can also act as a self-portrait mirror, though color accuracy is unsatisfactory and there is usually about half a second delay. However, compared to most phones on the market, the camera on Z308 is very fast and responsive.
SpecificationsGeneral Network GSM900 / GSM1800 / GSM1900 Introduced 2005 Q3 Status Available Form factor Flip Antenna Internal Size Weight 108 g (including battery) Dimensions 89.4 x 47.4 x 25.4 mm Display Type Graphical Colours TFT LCD, 256K Size 176 x 220 pixels 2nd Display Present, coloured, 80 x 64 pixels - Second display: 65,536 colours Memory Shared Memory 50 MB - External memory: TransFlash Ringtones Number 76 Polyphonic Yes - MP3 and Voice Ring tones Networking USB Yes Bluetooth Yes Infrared Yes Features SMS Send / Receive Camera Yes, 1 Mega-pixel camera, 3X digital zoom Java Yes - Dual camera - Video Recording (MPEG4) for up to 60 minutes - JAVA MIDP 2.0 - Speaker Phone - MP3/AAC/AAC+ Player - Dual Speaker - Digital Power Amp Standard Battery Standby Time 213 hours Talk Time 6 hours Review
The Z308 is a 3G phone with 2 cameras (VGA and 1.3 mega-pixel), MP3, AAC, MPEG 4 support, integrated handsfree, 50MB memory, T-flash expansion slot, USB and Bluetooth connectivity. The internal 262k TFT color display is said to be superb, while the external OLED display shows details like missed calls and the arrival of new messages. http://www.livingroom.org.au
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