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Product Details
Product Length:7.4 inches
Product Width:6.4 inches
Product Height:3.9 inches
Product Weight:0.22 pounds
Package Length:7.5 inches
Package Width:6.2 inches
Package Height:3.9 inches
Package Weight:1.7 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 21 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.0 ( 21 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

85 of 86 found the following review helpful:


4How can something this small take such great pictures?!!  Nov 01, 2005 By Dylan Capener
Why I got this camera:

I have a 1 year old, and the shutter lag of my previous digital camera made it near impossible to capture those fleeting moments. The 1/2000 of a second shutter speed of the Optio S6 ensures that I get the shot, the tracking AF feature (continually detects both horizontal and vertical movement of the main subject and maintains focus) ensures it is in focus and the extremely small size ensures I actually bring it with me.

Pro's:

-Extremely small 6 megapixel with 3x optical zoom

-Decent button layout on such a small camera

-LCD screen with great clarity and color, viewable even in bright sunlight

-Produced perfect photos in the following environments:

**indoor

****stationary object

****moving object

****Natural lighting

****Tungsten/Fluorescent lighting

**nighttime

**outdoor sun

**sand and water w/sun

-Spot focus, area focus and tracking focus all produce expected results and function well in a variety of lighting (even has a focus assist light for shooting in darker areas).

-Panorama assist function is a great idea and produced a

beautifully lined up panoramic shot.

-Really good quality true 30fps movie mode with effective

anti-shake

-In camera movie editing features work well

-Voice memo function is a "nice-to-have" and works well

-In camera slide show function is a nice way to share/review your photos when you're on the road.

Cons:

-You definitely need more than one battery as the included one will only last about 160 photos w/flash (which is only ~3/4 the capacity of a 512MB SD card).

-Doesn't come with A/C adapter (battery charger only)

-MPEG-4 DivX movie output isn't compatible with Quicktime/Mac's without searching for 3rd party codecs or alternate players (movies import into iMovie HD without sound)

-Due to the small size, buttons and camera may not be a good fit for people whose hands are referred to as "catchers mitts", or "sausage fingers" or other such hurtful (but perhaps accurate) adjectives.

Take home message:

My wife and I love this camera. It is small and light, takes GREAT pictures and has all of the features you could want in a digital camera (without any of the bulk). This is my first foray into the Pentax digital shooters (I've own(ed) Fuji and Canon digital and film camera's prior), and if this is any indication, they've got some great products. I'm so impressed with this one that I am considering getting an Optio WPi to take out in the water with me.

59 of 61 found the following review helpful:


4Pentax Optio S6 Comparatively  Nov 05, 2005 By C. Harper
The Pentax Optio S6 is a great camera for its size. I own the original Optio S and the little "nub" that controls most of the functions finally frustrated me into looking for a new camera.

I went into a local retailer thinking I would upgrade to another ultracompact, but not really expecting to buy the latest Pentax. I compared the Canon PowerShot SD400, Sony CyberShot DSC-T5, Nikon CoolPix S3, Pentax Optio S6, and Casio Exilim EX-Z500.

The contrast that struck me the most was screen resolution on the camera displays. Both the Sony and Pentax had over 230,000 pixels on the 2.5" screens and they were far superior to the Canon, Nikon, and Casio (with approx. 120,000 pixels each).

I tend to leave my pictures on a 1GB card for a long time and show them off from the camera, so screen resolution was important. From reading numerous reviews, it seems the Canon and Nikon offer the highest quality pictures overall, but the low screen resolution was very noticeable on these large displays.

Otherwise, all the cameras started up very quickly and were easy to use as a point-and-shoot camera should be. I chose the Pentax over the Sony because it was easier to hold and my finger kept getting in the picture with the Sony. Also, the Pentax still fits in the altoids tin!

I've used the Pentax for a week now and I'm very happy with the picture quality, incredibly small size, and ease of use. The battery life is average for an ultracompact and the picture modes actually work well.

I give it four stars instead of five because it only has 6 stops on the optical zoom. I definitely recommend the Pentax Optio S6 if you're considering an ultracompact camera.

27 of 27 found the following review helpful:


3Nice form factor, but flawed  Dec 03, 2005 By King Of All Gadgets
I bought the S6 to replace the original Optio S, which I accidentally dropped. I also considered buying the Casio EX-S500, which is said to have faster shutter response, good quality photos and better battery life, but requires a dock for all its connections and has a smaller screen.

Since I already had an extra set of accessories (battery, charger, etc), I took the plunge on an S6. My take so far:

Pros:
- great form factor
- intuitive menus
- full screen, unlimited movie mode (can't zoom during it, but only a few photo cameras permit this)
- Large screen - 2.5 in
- lots of scene options and manual controls

Cons:
- Poor battery life - not close to the 130 photos promised
- Absolutely dumb shutter button design - it's actually hard to take a photo without pressing really hard. Most presses just result in the auto focus activating, but no photo.
- Shutter Lag - assuming you do press the dumb button properly and it does take a picture, there is definitely a lag. This is similar to my old Optio - they should really have perfected this by now - how embarrasing.
- Viewing photos takes forever!! Apparently, the camera has a very slow processor, so when you want to view your photos, it first shows a semi-blurry image then....finally...the full resolution image. I wouldn't mind it as much, if you could advance to the next image during all this. You can't. You have to wait and wait for the full resolution photo to finally appear.
- Only average photo quality.
- Autofocus slow in standard mode (wider area). The instruction manual won't tell you this, but if you reduce the focus area, performance and shutter lag decreases significantly. Not intuitive. Also has a quick, but grainy Pan-Focus mode.

Conclusion:
I can (and plan to) live with the flaws of this neat looking camera; however, I can only imagine the headache when I ask someone else to take a picture with it and I have to explain the dumb shutter button 10 times. I would strongly recommend checking out all of the cameras you're considering in person before ordering to ensure you can live with the lags, screen delays, etc. Generally, I would recommend Canons, which take consistently great pictures and don't suffer from these kinds of design flaws - except for one. Canons have only uncompressed movie modes, which means the memory will fill up within a few minutes. Once their cameras get MPEG-4 movie compression, I am there.

20 of 21 found the following review helpful:


5Very good camera and great price  Apr 20, 2006 By Michael P. Bean "Hippolyte"
WHAT I LIKE:

1. It fits precisely inside an Altoids tin. Why does this matter? Because I keep my camera in my pocket and I've had problems in the past with pocket zoom cameras accidentally getting switched on in my pocket. When that happens, the zoom lens extends but it can't and then the mechanism breaks and the camera is out of commission. With the camera inside the Altoids box this is unlikely to occur. And the box camouflages the camera, possibly making it less likely to be stolen.

2. It has a very large screen on the back, makes it easy to compose shots and works well for viewing results.

3. It takes MPEG4 videos. MPEG4 is a great compression algorithm which means that I can store about 40 minutes of video on a single 1 GB SD card. Other MPEG4 cameras cost a lot more than this one. Also it can take 640x480 video, which is better than most small cameras.

Another reviewer claims that a DivX logo appears on all videos. This does not happen for me. Probably that reviewer is using a MPEG4 player that has a logo in the corner. This camera is actually a great, low-cost video camera.

4. 6 megapixels, for what they're worth. I don't believe that more megapixels == better camera but sometimes more is useful. For example, you can use the extra pixels in brigh daylight as a digital zoom.

PROBLEMS:

1. You have to take the battery out of the camera to recharge it.

2. The battery charge doesn't last super long, but it's long enough for me.

CONCLUSION:

This camera is an extremely good value. The other MPEG4 cameras that I was comparing this to cost over $400. This one was just a little more than half that price. When I lose or break this camera, I won't feel as badly about replacing it.

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:


3SD limitation?  Dec 21, 2006 By Anh
So I bought this as an X-mas present for myself. I've own an Canon SD100, 450, 600 and Casio EX-Z60 so I'm totally not a newbie to the digital world. I'm not going to repeat with others have stated in this review.

I'm really impress by the Optio S6 form factor; it really is compact. The response is quite quick turning on/off, zooming, viewing captured pict/video.

After playing with the camera for several hours, I was really disappointed in the following areas:
- temperature; the camera get warm/very warm (cool, warm, very warm, hot) after 1.5 hrs of continuous use
- continuous rapid shooting was slow; I was getting 1 pix every ~1.8sec
- can NOT read 4gb SD; I tried two different 4gb SD card I had laying around (PQI & Ridata) and received an "memory card error." All of my other cameras (even my 3 yr old Canon SD100) was able to use it just fine.
- the usb cable is propriety; why can't Pentax use a normal mini usb?

In sum, I like the camera size and its ability to record video in Divx format. The Divx function was the main impetus for purchasing this camera, but the SD limitation negate all the benefits the Optio S6 has to offer. I'm going to see if there's a firmware update (Pentax doesn't list one on their webpage) and report back here.

**update** so I received confirmation from Pentax Tech Support affirming my initial conclusion of the sd limitation. Indeed the maximum sd the Optio S6 can only read/write is a 1gb memory.

See all 21 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
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