3.3

Out of 10 Ratings

Owner's of the Sony Digital Camera Sony Digital Camera gave it a score of 3.3 out of 5. Here's how the scores stacked up:
  • Reliability

    3.0 out of 5
  • Durability

    3.5 out of 5
  • Maintenance

    3.4 out of 5
  • Performance

    3.4 out of 5
  • Ease of Use

    3.33 out of 5
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108
Troubleshooting
The screen is too dark or too bright.
Adjust the brightness of the LCD backlight (page 21).
The image is too dark.
You are shooting a subject with a light source behind the subject. Select the metering mode
(page 50) or adjust the exposure (page 49).
The image is too bright.
Adjust the exposure (page 49).
The image colors are not correct.
Set [Color Mode] to [Normal] (page 55).
Vertical streaks appear when you are shooting a very bright subject.
The smear phenomenon is occurring and white, black, red, purple, or other streaks appear on
the image. This phenomenon is not a malfunction.
Noise appears in the image when you view the screen in a dark place.
The camera is attempting to increase the visibility of the screen by temporarily brightening
the image under conditions of low illumination. There is no effect on the recorded image.
The eyes of the subject come out red.
Set [Red Eye Reduction] to [On] (page 55).
Shoot the subject at a distance closer than the flash range using the flash.
Light the room and shoot the subject.
Retouch the image using [Red Eye Correction] (DSC-W130 only) (page 58).
Dots appear and remain on the screen.
This is not a malfunction. These dots are not recorded (page 2).
The image seen through the finder does not match with the actual recordable
range.
The parallax phenomenon is occurring when the subject is close. In this case, to confirm the
recordable range, use the LCD screen.
Images cannot be confirmed through the finder while the digital zoom is in use.