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The Sony DSC-HX90VB.CE3 Cyber-Shot is a compact powerhouse featuring an 18.2MP Exmor R CMOS sensor, a premium ZEISS 30x optical zoom lens, and a bright 3-inch tilting LCD paired with a high-resolution OLED Tru-Finder. Its built-in GPS geotags your photos for easy mapping, while Wi-Fi and NFC enable quick sharing. Designed for the millennial professional on the go, it balances portability with versatile shooting capabilities, making it ideal for travel and street photography where convenience meets creative control.






| ASIN | B00W9YMLNE |
| Aperture Modes | F3.5–F5.6 |
| Autofocus Points | 327 |
| Batteries | 1 C batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | 109,099 in Electronics & Photo ( See Top 100 in Electronics & Photo ) 1,631 in All-in-One Digital Cameras |
| Brand | Sony |
| Camera Lens | Wide Angle lens |
| Colour | Black |
| Continuous shooting speed | 30 FPS |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (367) |
| Date First Available | 17 April 2015 |
| Delivery information | We cannot deliver certain products outside mainland UK ( Details ). We will only be able to confirm if this product can be delivered to your chosen address when you enter your delivery address at checkout. |
| Effective still resolution | 18.2 |
| Expanded ISO Maximum | 12800 |
| Focus type | Auto Focus |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Has image stabilisation | Yes |
| ISO Range | 80-12800 |
| Included components | battery, charger |
| Item Weight | 218 Grams |
| Item model number | DSC-HX90VB.CE3 |
| Max Focal Length | 123 Millimeters |
| Maximum shutter speed | 1 |
| Memory Slots Available | 1 |
| Min Focal Length | 24 Millimeters |
| Minimum shutter speed | 1/2000 Seconds |
| Model year | 2015 |
| Package Dimensions L x W x H | 15.4 x 11.9 x 9.2 centimetres |
| Package Weight | 0.71 Kilograms |
| Part number | DSC-HX90VB.CE3 |
| Plug profile | Sony E |
| Product Dimensions L x W x H | 10.2 x 3.5 x 5.8 centimetres |
| Style | Wi-Fi, Nfc |
| Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
| Zoom Type | Optical Zoom |
G**W
A capable end enjoyable camera.
Spent a lot of time dithering between full frame and more portable. You can find all the specs and lots of reviews elsewhere so will just say here that I went for portable because I wanted a good travel camera and something a little less intrusive when photographing street scenes and the like. This packs a lot of camera in a small package. It’s versatile, great focus modes, the fitting offers a host of adaptor options so I was surprised to find I could fit anything from the latest Sony lenses through to old M42 screw thread lenses if I want (good if you want to attach to a telescope or something other than a camera lens). Specifications aside I’ve found over the years that some cameras are ‘enjoyable’ to use and prefer them to others that on paper are more capable. I’ve found the a6300 to be a camera enjoyable to use, even with a bigger lens like the Sigma 100-600 contemporary when I put it on the lens rather than the other way around. Not regretted my final choice once.
C**N
A versatile little camera, though with compromises where image quality is concerned
I bought this camera because it is very compact, it has a very good zoom range for its size, and it comes with an electronic viewfinder (essential for composing shots at full zoom because it's easier to hold the camera steady when you're looking through the viewfinder) and GPS. The only other camera that met these requirements was the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ60. I opted for the Sony because it is appreciably smaller than the Panasonic, and because – having compared sample images from both cameras – I felt that the Sony delivers marginally better image quality than the Panasonic. This said, one should not expect too much of any compact camera with a x30 zoom where image quality is concerned. No zoom lens is going to deliver sharp images throughout its range. The wider the zoom range, the more image quality is compromised. Furthermore, fitting a x30 zoom to a pocket-sized camera is only possible if the camera has a tiny sensor. Tiny sensors generate grain (digital noise) and resolve fine detail poorly. This is not about the megapixel count but the physical size of the sensor: squeezing more megapixels onto a tiny sensor only makes the problem worse. In going for a compact camera with a long zoom I was consciously opting to sacrifice image quality for practicality. The camera handles nicely thanks to a protruding grip on the right side which allows you to hold it securely with one hand. It feels heavy for its size at 245g, indicating just how much gadgetry is packed into it. Sony’s designers have pulled off a remarkable feat in making the HX90V so small, but even they couldn’t fit a x30 zoom lens completely within the camera body. The protruding lens housing adds bulk to the camera, but on the plus side it gives you something to hold on to with your left hand. I find that two-handed shooting DSLR-style, with left hand cradled around the base of the lens, is essential to hold the camera steady when shooting at full zoom. And there is a very handy control ring around the lens housing which I have set to control exposure compensation. Sometimes you’re taking a photo with large areas of background shadow, which can fool the camera into overexposing your main subject. You can avoid this by setting negative exposure compensation. This normally involves diving deep into the camera menu, but with the HX90V all I need to do is turn the control ring with my left hand as I'm framing the shot. Anyone familiar with compact cameras should find it easy to get the hang of the various buttons on the back of the camera. The camera menu system is intuitive if a bit complex. Image quality is a mixed bag. Colour rendition and exposure are generally accurate. The autofocus is excellent: I have never yet had to delete an image because of poor focus. Photos are pleasing to look at as whole images, as the attached wideangle landscape shows. However, if you scrutinise images in detail at full size the shortcomings of the camera sensor and lens emerge. The camera struggles to capture fine detail: see second attachment, which is a crop from the full size version of the landscape image. Grain is visible in photos even at ISO80, the lowest setting. Wideangle shots suffer from blur in the corners, particularly the lower right corner in my camera's case: see third attachment. Shots at full zoom are soft. Grain obviously increases at higher ISO settings. The camera does its best to wipe away the grain, but at the cost of eliminating fine detail and giving images something of a watercolour-effect look. See fourth attachment, shot at the maximum ISO of 3200, and the fifth which is a crop from the full size version of attachment 4. The in-camera GPS is easy to use. It does not appear to increase the camera’s power consumption excessively although I have not yet needed to keep it on for a whole day’s shooting. The location of geotagged photos can be identified on a map by means of Sony's PlayMemories Home app on a PC. The HX90V is equipped with NFC (near field communication), which supposedly allows you to set up a connection between it and a compatible smartphone or tablet simply by holding the two devices against each other. I say supposedly because I have not yet been able to make this feature work. However I have not missed it because setting up a connection manually is very easy once you have downloaded the necessary app on your mobile phone. My overall verdict? As I said I bought this camera for practicality not image quality. It scores highly for practicality with its combination of compactness and a long zoom range, not to mention other features like GPS and a tilting screen. Although I expected compromises where image quality is concerned, I admit I have been surprised at just how extensive the compromises are. Still, I'm very happy with it overall. This camera is not for you if you want professional-standard image quality. But if, like me, you want a small but versatile camera and you don't intend to scrutinise images in detail at 100% size, then this camera would make an excellent choice.
M**P
Excellent Camera
Zoom is great, optical viewfinder is even better (in very bright light), folding screen is good for selfies, wifi is great for tablet / phone connectivity and transfer of photos, this camera has it all.
P**Y
Sony DSC-HX90V
Very handy camera, does not come with a case or SD card, however it does come with USB/Charging lead. Takes HDR images in Auto plus mode and also has scene type selection such as Night shooting, Firework, Beach etc. Fully charged the battery only went down 1 bar after a full day trip out, taking approx 80 images via the screen being on. The camera does have a view finder that can be focused. It has a 30x zoom, which gets a bit shaky at full zoom. Picture quality is good but will never beat a DSLR. However took some photo's in some dark museums of items in glass cases without the flash in HDR mode and they came out great. Nice neat handy camera to slip in your pocket when the DSLR is to heavy to lug around, very pleased with its performance. and have been pleasantly surprised by what images it produces in low light area. Last of all it records GPS position of the photo taken, this saves a lot of time when adding to photo sites.
A**L
Sony DSC-HX90VB
This Sony DSC-HX90VB replaces my Canon SX740 which in itself was a brilliant camera with a bigger screen and zoom range at 40x but this Sony DSC-HX90VB at 30x is more than enough for me. The main reason to change was because its easier to setup GPS and the use of the eye viewer similar to my SLR. The facilities of this camera are many and it would take me days to go though them all. I managed to get a kindle book download for the Sony DSC-HX90VB which is a great addition to help with setting up etc, but does not fully answer my questions about the GPS. There are loads of reviews on YouTube and I spent hours watching them before deciding to change. There was no Kindle for the Canon HX740. The Sony DSC-HX90VB is slightly smaller and the screen does not seem as bright as the Canon but it slips into the pocket more easier. Once I understand the GPS, I may add it later, but for now I have a lot of camera to play and learn with. One problem I did have, the supplied USB mains adaptor to was not a UK one and was not the same as the images for this camera, never the less, the camera still warrants my 5 Stars.
D**E
utilisation en voyage (Écosse pour la première utilisation), menu intelligent d'assistance qui permet la réalisation de très belles images. les atouts majeurs sont pour moi le format pocket idéal et le viseur escamotable qui est extrêmement utile en cas de soleil de face et permet une meilleure précision des prises de vues.
I**R
Mir waren folgende Dinge wichtig: - Sucher - GPS - starkes optisches Zoomobjektiv - kompakte Abmessungen, damit die Kamera im Urlaub in die Rocktasche passt - gute Qualität von Dämmerungsaufnahmen bzw. in Räumen, wo Blitz nicht erlaubt ist. Wenn hier einige schreiben, dass ihnen die Knöpfe etc. zu fummelig sind, kann ich das ganz und gar nicht nachempfinden. Ich hatte ja als Vorgänger die HX5V und die war ja ziemlich baugleich. Meine vorherige Kamera hatte bis auf den Sucher all dies ja erfüllt, leider gab es hartnäckige Flecken bei Aufnahmen mit blauem Himmel, die ich trotz vieler Repartur-Anleitungen nicht weggebracht hatte. Da es ja immer weniger Kameras mit GPS gibt, war die Wahl sehr schwierig, weil ich mir ein Preislimit von ca. € 300.- gesetzt hatte. Schön wäre gewesen, wenn der Videomodus mit 4k möglich gewesen wäre, aber Full-HD mit 1920*1080 muss halt reichen. Ich komme sowieso immer mehr vom Filmen ab und gehe in Richtung Fotobuch. Die ersten Aufnahmen waren sehr vielversprechend, auch mit der Bedienung komme ich gut zurecht. WLAN ist auch ok, so kann man Fotos sofort aufs Handy überspielen und auf zB Facebook posten. Was mir extra noch gut gefällt ist die Waagrecht-Anzeige im Sucher. Das hat beim Vorgängermodell gefehlt und ich finde es sehr praktisch. Vorwahl von Blende bzw. Verschlusszeit werde ich nicht so oft verwenden, aber zum Spiel mit Schärfe und Unschärfe ist es natürlich von Vorteil. Wie schon Andere hier geschrieben habe, ist die USB-Buchse etwas fummelig, aber das Sichern der Fotos mache ich sowieso weiterhin über einen Cardreader. Und ein externes Ladegerät mit 2 Reserveakkus ist für sowieso selbstverständlich. Auch beim Ein- und Ausfahren des Suchers muss man etwas aufpassen und dass man dann noch die Optik beim Sucher extra rausziehen muss, ist schon etwas störend. Auch beim Blitz habe ich etwas Bedenken wegen der etwas fragilen Mechanik. Da muss man wirklich drauf achten, dass beide wieder eingefahren werden, bevor man die Kamera in die Tasche gibt. Was mir auch noch gut gefällt ist, dass man über ein Drehrad am Objektiv den Zoom manuell bedienen kann, und dasselbe Rad auch noch für sonstige Einstellungen verwenden kann (zB zum Einstellen der Szenenart bei der Einstellung 'Szenenwahl'. Eine gute Verbesserung gegenüber der HX5V ist auch, dass das Einstellrad für die verschiedenen Aufnahmemodi sich jetzt nicht mehr von alleine verstellt, wenn man die Kamera aus der Hosentasche nimmt. Beim Vorgängermodell ist mir das sehr oft passiert. Gut ist auch die kostenlose Software ‚Play Memories Home‘ bzw. ‚.. Mobil‘. Jetzt hab ich endlich eine gute Möglichkeit zum Verwalten meiner unzähligen gespeicherten Fotos und zum Sortieren nach der Kalenderfunktion. Was leider etwas weh tut ist, dass das Positionieren in Google Maps hier nicht mehr unterstützt wird. Aber für diesen guten Preis von ca. €320.- kann ich mir nichts Besseres wünschen und ich bin über all die vielen Goodies, die noch einstellbar sind, die Bildqualität und die Bedienbarkeit sehr zufrieden. Alles in Allem: eine perfekte Urlaubskamera.
C**N
Da possessore di reflex cercavo un compromesso "da viaggio" che avesse buone qualità e dimensioni contenute, questa Sony devo dire mi ha sorpreso in tutto! Qualità foto molto molto buona(eccezionale sarebbe ipocrita per una macchina di questo segmento), eccezionale zoom e altrettanto la stabilizzazione, a mio avviso i menù sono intuitivi e facili da usare, poi ci si può tranquillamente perdere data l'infinità di opzioni che contiene, video ottimi davvero, merito anche della stabilizzazione, batteria buona..non mi é durata molto le prime cariche ma normale visto tcome ho smanettato e fatto video poi con l'opzione GPS inserita(utilissima quando fai foto viaggio), dimensioni super compatte e senso al tatto super dato il corpo metallico e non plastico e come molte altre...davvero un ottimo acquisto per le mie esigenze, per ora pienamente soddisfatto!
I**A
Macchina stupenda con alcune limitazioni conosciute e qualche limitazione imprevista. La macchina praticamente ha tutto quello che serve in un corpo piccolissimo. Alla Sony non si sono risparmiati dotando l'apperecchio di un'ottica di buon livello, di un zoom ottico 30x, di una ghiera multifunzione, di un mirino estraibile diottrico OLED, di un flash estraibile e parzialmente orientabile, di un ricevitore GPS, del WiFi, del ricevitore NFC, di un ampio monitor ruotabile di 180° per i selfie, di una manopola di modo con la possibilità di scegliore tra vari diversi programmi ,tecnologia Exmor R, Bionz X e..... la qualità Sony. La limitazione prevista è la limitata dimensione del sensore che rende difficoltosa ogni attività con scarsità di luce. Quello che invece non capisco è il perchè del limitato numero di app di questo specifico modello e mi riferisco specialmente alla possibilità di fare Time Lapse od altre cose già disponibili per altri modelli forse anche inferiori di costo. Per il resto come al solito ottimo servizio Amazon
A**X
Je l'ai comparé à un TZ60: il n'y a pas photo... J'ai eu 3 Lumix avant de basculer définitivement chez Sony. La qualité du capteur est sans comparaison. J'ai également un réflex, il est certain que si on compare les photos, le Sony est à la traine, mais il s'en sort avec les honneurs, même en basse lumière (photos jointe: HX90V@1600ISO est plus jaune car j'aurais du faire la balance des blancs manuellement, la photo du reflex (3200ISO) a été prise en RAW donc la balance des blancs a été optimisée. La mode vidéo est incroyable: un vrai camescope. Le viseul rétractable est très bien vu: en plein soleil, il est toujours compliqué d'utiliser l'écran arrère, mais surtout en spectacle (lorsque cela est autorisé), il est possible de prendre des photos ou filmer sans déranger vos voisins... La qualité de fabrication est irréprochable. Certes, cet appareil coute cher, mais c'est un vrai appareil photo avec une vraie optique, donc les photos sont nettement meilleures qu'avec un Smartphone. Pour guère plus cher, il est possible d'acheter un reflex, mais plus encombrant, sur lequel il faudra jongler avec les objectifs pour avoir la même polyvalence.
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3 days ago
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