World AIDS Day

World AIDS Day, observed December 1 every year, is dedicated to raising awareness of the AIDS pandemic caused by the spread of HIV infection. Government and health officials observe the day, often with speeches or forums on the AIDS topics. Since 1995, the President of the United States has made an official proclamation on World AIDS Day. Governments of other nations have followed suit and issued similar announcements.

World AIDS Day Themes, 1988–present


A large red ribbon hangs between columns in the north portico of the White House for World AIDS Day, November 30, 2007

A 67 m long "condom" on the Obelisk of Buenos Aires, Argentina, part of an awareness campaign for the 2005 World AIDS Day
 
1988 Communication
1989 Youth
1990 Women and AIDS
1991 Sharing the Challenge
1992 Community Commitment
1993 Act
1994 AIDS and the Family
1995 Shared Rights, Shared Responsibilities
1996 One World. One Hope.
1997 Children Living in a World with AIDS
1998 Force for Change: World AIDS Campaign With Young People
1999 Listen, Learn, Live: World AIDS Campaign with Children & Young People
2000 AIDS: Men Make a Difference
2001 I care. Do you?
2002 Stigma and Discrimination
2003 Stigma and Discrimination
2004 Women, Girls, HIV and AIDS
2005 Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise
2006 Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise – Accountability
2007 Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise – Leadership
2008 Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise – Lead – Empower – Deliver 
2009 Universal Access and Human Rights 
2010 Universal Access and Human Rights 
2011 Getting to Zero 
2012 Getting to Zero 
2013 Getting to Zero 
2014 Getting to Zero 
2015 Getting to Zero 

INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION 2011

To view picture of the film please click on the  icon

SR. NO.
Name of the Film
International Name of the Film
Name of the Director
Country
1
Open Doors
Ashish Pandey
India
2
Bureacracy Sonata
Vinay Shukla
India
3
Another Planet
Smita Bhide
India/UK
4
Unearthed
Karan Vazirani
India
5
Man of the Match
Hitesh Kewalya
India
6
Save The Girl Child
Sunil H. Naik
India
7
Inklab
Dr. Gaurav Chhabra
India
8
Anthony Gonsalves - The Music Legend
Ashoke Rane
India
9
Hot "N" Fast
Rajinder Singh Puller
India
10
Paper Planes
Neha Singh
India
11
Mapple syrup
Alexander N
USA
12
Crazy Beats Strong Every Time
Moon Molson
USA
13
White
Kanchan Ghosh
India
14
The Finish Line
Akshay Roy
India
15
Soddem
Sajeev Pazhoor
India
16
Dil ki basti mein
Anwar jamal
India

Vasudha Awards- Competition Section for Environmental Issues



 
A Pestering Journey
India, 2011, 52 mins 
Director: K.R. Manoj
Producer: Ranjini Krishnan
Cinematographer: Shehned Jalal
Synopsis: A voyage through two pesticide tragedies in post- independent India,A pestering journey is an attempt to interrogate the legitimate forms and technologies of killing, available in a culture.

Contact: 
Ranjini Krishnan,
“Geetha”, Panaymutttom,
Nedumangad,
Trivandrum,
Kerala - 695561.
Phone: 9447401822/9446217315
E-mail: tropicalcinema@gmail.com

 
Battle for Survival
India, 2011, 30 mins
Director: Naresh Bedi
Producer: Naresh Bedi/Paresh Bedi
Cinematographer: Naresh Bedi, Rajesh Bedi, Ajay Bedi and Vijay Bedi
Synopsis:  Filmed over several years across the country, this is a comprehensive film about tiger conservation in India. For the first time, it captures diverse tiger habitats and rare behavioral footage of wild tigers.  The film deals with the key issues of village relocation, poaching, excessive tourism and problem of rising man and animal conflicts. Is India the tiger’s best chance for survival?

Contact
:  Bedi films
E 19, Rajouri Garden,
New Delhi -110027,
India.
Phone: 9810274114/ 01125439939
E-mail: bedifilms@airtelmail.in
 
My Home Is Green (Pachilakkoodu)
India, 2010, 30 mins
Director: Sajan SindhuProducer:  Ellora Multimedia
Cinematographer:  Jibin Abraham
Synopsis:  My home is green is an animation film in which a lonely ant who has lost his entire tribe in a pesticide mishap, one day meets a baby caterpillar and a relationship grows between them - the two tiny creatures struggle together to escape from a pesticide spray.

Contact: 
Sajan Sindhu,
Jyothirgamaya ,
Farook College. P.O.
Calicut, Kerala 673632.
Phone: 9446279596
E-mail:  sanjansidhu@hotmail.com


Save Earth
India, 2011, 2 mins
Director: Prakash Mishra
Producer: Prakash Mishra
Synopsis: This film tells us about the environment and the perils of pollution.
Contact:  Mr. Praksh Mishra
H.No. 319, N -1 D Sector,
Securtiy Line Govindpura
Bhel Bhupal -462023
Phone: 8109763588
E-mail: prakashmishra.1989@gmail.com

42nd International FILM Festival of India's

IFFI Newsroom: Watch the news coverage about the 42nd International film Festival of India in Zee news
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10150380465242781

Vasudha Awards- Competition Section for Environmental Issues


Vasudha Awards- Competition Section for Environmental Issues
Sr.no
Name of the Film
International name of the film
Name of the director
Country
1
Save Earth
Save Earth
Prakash Mishra
India
2
Pachilakkkoodu
My Home Is Green
Sajan Sindhu
India
3
A Pestering Journey
A pestering journey
K.R. Manoj
India
4.
Battle for survival
Battle for survival
Naresh Bedi
India

42nd International FILM Festival of India's


The Short Film Center is a business platform created at the International Film Festival of India, Goa. In an effort to bring the short film makers, buyers, festival organizers and funding agencies on one single platform. The 3rd edition of the Short Film Center will be organised from November 24- December 1 2011 during the 42nd International Film Festival of India. The 9 days long event will be a unique opportunity to the Short and Documentary film makers for networking with Festival Programmers, Content Buyers and Funding Agencies.”

Award Winning add film..!!


Award Winning My add film..!!

Created in AE... motion graphics

Slide show of my tour of chennai


Award Function Slideshow: Prakash’s trip to Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India was created by TripAdvisor. See another Chennai slideshow. Create a free slideshow with music from your travel photos.


Award Winning My add film..!!


Save the girl child

पूरे देश में बेटी बचाओं अभियान चल रहा हैं यह अभियान उन बेटियों तक हैं जो भ्रूण हत्या अथवा बाल हत्या का शिकार होती हैं लेकिन अपने पैरो पर जो बेटियां खड़ी हो गई उनके एम.एम.एस. बनाकर ब्लैंकमेल करने,गैंगरेप करने और एम.एम.एस. को फारवर्ड करने से बेटियां बर्वाद हो रही हैं, आत्म हत्याएं कर रही हैं। दुर्भाग्य की बात हैं कि पडौसी, परिवारजन अथवा तथाकथित प्रेमी ही वर्बाद कर रहे हैं।







'How sad, many girls missing from our country are found buried in some graveyard....
Welcome to the world of the girl child, promising yet gloomy, hopeful, yet in despair. The hand that rocks the cradle, the pro creator, the mother of tomorrow; a woman shapes the destiny of civilization. Such is the tragic irony of fate, that a beautiful creation such as the girl child is today one of the gravest concerns facing humanity, with a volley of summits, conferences and events held for the cause, with topmost world leaders at the helm.

Traditions and rituals outline the existence of the Indian girl child. Amidst uproars of gender equality and law enforcement, female infants are still found dumped in trash, by the dozens, while unborn fetuses continue to be sniffed in the womb. Wrought with discrimination and prejudiced by rituals, our society has dealt the girl child a rough hand, starting even before birth, till the dark of life.

India is growing dynamically in every fields. Today, the boom in economy, innovative technologies and improved infrastructure has become nation’s pride. The country has witnessed advancements in all fields but bias against a girl child is still prevailing in the country.
This social evil is deep rooted in Indian ethos and the most shocking fact is that the innovative and hard high end technologies are brutally killing the Indian girl child. Innovative techniques, like biopsy, ultrasound, scan tests and amniocentesis, devised to detect genetic abnormalities, are highly misused by number of families to detect gender of the unborn child. These clinical tests are highly contributing to the rise in genocide of the unborn girl child.

In today’s day and age most couples prefer the process known as a planned pregnancy, because of various factors; prime amongst them being the financial well being to support the birth and nurturing of a child. In such cases, the first prenatal visit actually happens prior to actual pregnancy, to see whether one is ready to go off the contraception pills and conceive a baby.

However, in maximum conceptions, one is unaware of the pregnancy until actual realization dawns after one skips the first menstrual cycle. Normally doctors except ladies to pay their first visit anywhere between the sixth and twelfth week after conception.

Amniocentesis started in India in 1974 to detect fetal abnormalities. These tests were used to detect gender for the first time in 1979 in Amritsar, Punjab. Later the test was stopped by the Indian Council of Medical Research but it was too late. The benefits of these tests were leaked out and people started using it as an instrument for killing an innocent and unborn girl child. Many of the traditional women organizations also took up cudgels to stop this illegal practice but all failed and with the passage of time these tests became a major contributor to bias against a girl child.

Female feticide and infanticide is not the only issues with a girl child in India. At every stage of life she is discriminated and neglected for basic nutrition, education and living standard. When she was in the womb, she was forced to miss the moment when she was supposed to enter the world. At the time of birth her relatives pulled her back and wrung her neck. After killing her she was thrown into a trash can.

During childhood, her brother was loaded with new shoes, dresses and books to learn while she was gifted a broom, a wiper and lots of tears. In her teenage, she missed tasty delicious food to eat and got only the crumbs. During her college days, she was forced to get married, a stage where illiteracy, lack of education resulted in high fertility rate, aggravating the condition of females in the country. Again if this female gives birth to a girl child, the journey begins once again. She missed all roses of life and was finally fitted to a graveyard. That’s where she got peace of mind.



The nation of mothers still follows a culture where people idolizes son and mourns daughters. UN figures out that about 750,000 girls are aborted every year in India. Abortion rates are increasing in almost 80% of the India states, mainly Punjab and Haryana. These two states have the highest number of abortions every year. If the practice continues, then no longer a day will come when Mother India will have no mothers, potentially, no life.

We all are proud citizens of India. The need of hour is to realize our responsibilities and give a halt to this evil crime. What can we do to curb the brutal and undesirable practice of mass killing girls? A determined drive can initiate a spark to light the lamp and show the world that we all are part of the great Mother India.

Girl Child – Future of India

Perseverance and inspiration often leads to privilege but without hard work and dedication they'll be no success. The hardest profession to take in life is being a girl child. Discrimination and discrepancy are two most important factors that hamper the journey of every female from the earliest stage of life. Starting from her presence into her mother’s womb to infancy, childhood and finally to adulthood, she is outnumbered by the male dominating society of the country.

India is a country where social disadvantage outweighs natural biological advantage of being a girl. A whole range of discriminatory practices including female foeticide, female infanticide, female genital mutilation, son idolization, early marriage and dowry have buried the future of the nation. In India, discriminatory practices have greatly influenced the health and well-being of a girl child, resulting in a higher mortality rate.
It is believed that every year 12 million girls are born in the country but unfortunately only 1/3 of those survive. Some are killed in the womb, some at the time of birth, some die due to ill health and some due to poor nutritional status. Only a few numbers of girls are able to survive till their 15th birthday.

Female feticide and infanticide are the most popular social evils prevailing in the country. This evil is the outcome of poverty, illiteracy and gender discrimination. The country fails to understand, how a mother can be so ruthless and vulnerable.

It is said that God created mothers because He could not be present everywhere. Its unbelievable to realize that a God’s representative is continuously killing someone beautiful even before she can come out and see the beauty of nature.

It’s painful to confess that the trend still exists in various parts of the country. States like Maharashtra, Haryana, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Punjab are most popular for practicing female foeticide and infanticide.

Poverty, gender discrimination and son preference have also influenced the nutritional status of a girl child. There are almost 75 million malnourished children existing in the country. It is estimated that 75% of the total malnourished children are girls who show signs of chronic and acute malnutrition.

Girls who manage to cross this hard phase of life, gets trapped by the evil society during adolescence and teenage. These are the stages where more nutrition is required for normal growth and development. Unfortunately, nutritional needs are neglected for girls and they are often kept locked within the four walls.

Exacerbate discrimination against female for nutrition and education has led to an increase in child marriage, reduction in fertility rates and population growth, potentially, women’s participation in nurturing the future of every nation.

Improper nutrition during adolescence results in various reproductive health disorders. The effects of these disorders further exacerbates by early marriage, closely spaced pregnancies, poor access to information about family planning, traditional practices, etc.

Girl child is the future of every nation and India is no exception. A little amount of care, a handful of warmth and a heart full of love for a girl child can make a big difference. Close your eyes, free your thoughts and hear the voice of God, He is saying something to all of us, “Save Me”

A girl child is God's gift, nurture her like a flower

India is one of the few countries where selective sex gender bias exists till today. The onslaught of feminism has not allowed Indian women to revolt against the century old systems. For centuries together women have played their roles of being the provider and sustainers of families without even a thank you note at the end of their lives. It has been proven in India and other countries where ever women have been given freedom they have changed the world and made a better place to live in. Consider these facts:

Education and training helps the woman to hone her talents. She can earn more money. Women have the ability to put the money earned in further education. They also spend the money of better healthcare for children and families. Men on the other hand are spendthrifts. When they earn they spend it on vices and make hell for their families. The economic status of the woman gives her a better social understanding. An educated woman is likely to defend herself better than an illiterate one against men, crimes and abuse. Once she knows her rights she can also approach the courts. Many daring women have taken such recourse to bring men to task.

It is only a woman who understands that weather a male or female child, it should be healthy and given equal status. A woman has the power to end the evil of dowry system also. As girls are given a chance to live there will be control in population. Families will be small, healthy better educated and happy. Today’s woman has to be given the confidence to live. She will eventually be a balanced mother. The craving for the ubiquitous male heir has to vanish. Discrimination between the male and female child have to end for ever. Educated Indians have to behave responsibly and set an example for one another.

This topic i help Google & many more side's...it's real story.so please guy's being support & change this our mind.

Professional photography without professional equipment

Do you remember my guest post for digital-photography-school.com? If not, here it is: How to Create an Eye-Catching Product Shot, I promised to get the same or similar photo without using any professional equipment. This weekend I spent less then hour getting it done. The result is below.

$55 lighting set result

Professional photography without professional equipment

Professional photography without professional equipment

Not bad, is it? Instead of five light sources I used only four, which is why we are missing the spot under the phone.

Here is what I paid $55 in HomeDepot and this was my studio setup for this shot.


ghetto gear

$55 lighting set

I didn’t include a few things, like a paper, office frames and the electricity bill, but you get an idea. This or similar items is what everyone already has at home.
I’ve selected fluorescent reflector bulbs, as they are much easier to work with (they are cold), but it can be any other bulbs. The only requirement for the lighting is to have the same color temperature, otherwise you won’t be able to balance them (talking about white balance of the image).

Now what is really needed to be good in tabletop photography?

The light modifiers. You may not need to use softboxes or diffusers, It can be virtually anything. I’ve used foam core board panels ($3 a piece) and transparent office picture frames, like this one:

diy mini softbox by koloskov

diy mini softbox by koloskov

I’ve stuck a piece of plastic in it, but it can be white paper or gel or whatever you have a fancy for:-) For my particular set, white semi-transparent plastic is what I needed -> (Savage diffusion roll).

The lighting setup

$55 lighting setup for pro results

$55 dirty lighting setup for pro photographer:-)

As you see, the only real photographer’s thing was PCB light stands. I was too lazy to bring our dining chairs to the studio, but they will work with those lighting clamps maybe even better then the pro light stands. So, please don’t point at them saying that it wasn’t fair to use a piece of “real” equipment :-)

I’ve used 4 lights:

#1 and #2 from both sides, same as softboxes were placed on the original, “pro” setup (you can take a look here). Because I’ve placed my “ghetto” softboxes much closer to the subject, the effective size was the same as from much larger Elinchroms I used earlier. To limit light spill, I’ve added an edge cover around my lamps, this helped to direct light to a front.

The screens on the front was needed to prevent light from hitting the camera lens directly. Ideally I would have preferred to do a barndoor-like screens (from the same aluminum foil tape and foam core board for each of the bulbs), but my solution was the most time effective. Plus, these front screens were reflecting the light back to the subject, highlighting the front of it.

The same with the rear screens: there were preventing light spill to dark background.

The light #3 was used to highlight top edge of the phone, same as softbox#3 on the “pro” shot. I’ve made a snoot-like modifier for it from a tape and black paper.

The light #3

ghetto-snoot-mod-diy-by-koloskov

ghetto-snoot-mod-diy-by-koloskov

The light #4 was a snoot pointed to a background to create a spot on it. Two reflectors taped together and some color gel from screw-in strobe:

DIY snoot

ghetto-snoot-by-koloskov

ghetto-snoot-by-koloskov

If I needed to modify a light spread from this DIY snoot, I would easily do this by adding a tube inserted in the snoot nose, made from black paper.

Side view of the lighting setup:

ghetto-lighting-setup-for-pro-results-by-alex-koloskov

ghetto-lighting-setup-for-pro-results-by-alex-koloskov

How I was modifying the power of each light to get the ratio needed? Easy:-) I’ve covered the front of the bulb with that aluminum foil tape. Less opening – less light, and the opposite.

I purposely used the dirtiest pieces of cardboard I have. I used the cheapest $20 computer table as a shooting table solution. I only spent about 40 minutes to build the modifiers and the lighting setup. It was probably the most unprofessional approach to the tabletop photography I could squeeze out from myself. I did it so that i could show aspiring photographer’s that

It’s not the thousands dollar equipment which makes the image. It is a photographer behind the shot.

Nothing new, we hear it all the time, right? But when I read, under almost every post “I wish I could have that gear, and I would be able to shoot like this.”

It’s not the gear, it’s you. You’re not thinking out of the box and you who’s not wanting to spend time playing with the lights and stuff you already have. It’s fine if you spend every evening watching TV or playing your favorite computer games, but at least don’t lie to yourself saying that you can’t get the shot because you don’t have money or time to invest in your photography.
You do not need time. You need to decide.
(C)~Seth Godin

Please don’t get offended. I am not trying to offend you, my friend. I write this in hope to “ignite” those of you who were waiting for this… Sometimes a small “push” is what you need:-)

If you’re wondering how much post-production was involved? Little bit more than the one done with $2000 lighting, but not by much. Below is as-is image of the phone. The second exposure one was used to capture phone’s screen: it was too bright for the exposure/lighting I had.

AS-is from camera RAW:

as-is phone, done with $55 ligthing and no pro gear

as-is phone, done with $55 lighting and no pro gear

And again, this is the final one:

Professional photography without professional equipment

Professional photography without professional equipment

A few words about disadvantages of working with these lights: You need a very long exposure (2-5 seconds), meaning only still life can be captured. Mirror lockup and a steady tripod are good things for these shots as well.



How to hold your camera

Even with vibration reduction readily available, the way that you hold your camera can often make or break a photograph.

Too many people seem to pinch-hold their camera by the four corners of the body, as if it were a photograph. There's good reason for this: it's a natural-feeling way of holding a small compact camera at arm's length.

Unfortunately, the moment you move the camera up to your eye (when looking through the viewfinder of a DSLR for example), it becomes the worst way of holding the camera from a biomechanical standing.

Your elbows spring out from your body as the camera comes closer to your eye, and the weight of the lens remains totally unsupported, tipping the front of the camera down, even with lightweight kit lenses.


Cup, not grip
Here's a better way. Cup the lens in your upturned left hand, thumb and forefinger sitting just behind the lip at the front of the lens mount. Don't grip the lens; just rest it in your left hand.

If the lens is too stubby to hold in this manner, cup the underside of your camera instead. Now, let your right hand loosely grip the camera (it's why they put a camera grip on that side).

You should find your right index finger naturally comes to rest on the shutter release button.

Your elbows will want to magically fly out to the sides at first; consciously remember to tuck them in close to your body. After a while, this becomes second-nature, and having your elbows pointing out will seem alien to you.

Elbow tuck

Soon, you find the four-corner-pinch seems wrong, even when holding a compact camera. You start holding the camera closer to your body and cupping the camera body, rather than holding it at arm's length.

You also begin to tuck your elbows in automatically. If so, congratulations… you are holding your camera in a far more stable manner than before.

There are still times where holding the camera by gripping the sides of the body is useful, such as when taking pictures from above your head - often called the 'Hail Mary' shot by news photographers. But, such times are rare.


Making a stand

Now that you know the right way to hold a camera, what about your stance? Instead of directly facing your subject matter, take a half-step forward with your left foot, put most of your weight on your right leg and bend your knees slightly.

This gives you more support in the direction you are photographing in, and your knees help damp down movement from your upper body.

This right angled stance is also useful if you want to lower your viewpoint. Simply bring your right foot back and drop down onto that knee. Your right knee is now in the same point where your right foot was when standing and you can pan the camera without strain.

It is little wonder that people sometimes call it 'shooting' a picture, because the way you hold a camera is exactly the same way a target shooter holds a rifle.

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX100V review

The Sony Cyber-shot HX100V hits the shelves some 2 years
following on from the original Sony HX1 model. The latter was the instigator of the “Sweep Panorama” (live panorama capture that’s auto-stitched in camera) craze, and the HX100V not only takes this a step further forward but amps up the features elsewhere too.
Now with a 30x optical zoom that ranges from 27-810mm (equivalent) with a bright F/2.8-5.6 aperture, the Sony HX100V more than offers the extensive range integral to a superzoom. While its closest competitors - the Fujifilm






FinePix HS20 EXR and Canon PowerShot SX30 IS - possess wider 24mm lenses, the Sony’s control provides a unique angle that’s great to use: surrounding the lens is a manual ring to extend through the zoom, but the flick of a switch will change its function to manual focus. This means both zoom and manual focus are ideally placed in relation to the body, plus there’s a second zoom in the form of a zoom rocker around the shutter that’s great in providing an extra steady hold while zooming during movie capture.


In addition to a 3-inch, 920K-dot variangle LCD the HX100V also has a built-in 200k-dot electronic viewfinder. Although the viewfinder resolution isn’t especially high and the size can prove frustratingly small to squeeze your eye up against, its presence is of huge use. Bright sunlight causes notable reflections from the LCD screen that can disrupt your work, and it is then that the viewfinder comes into play for more accurate composition and exposure feedback.



Dial in manual control

As well as automatic modes the HX100V also has full manual options and a thumbwheel-cum-button on the rear is well placed to quickly adjust options. Aperture, shutter, ISO and exposure compensation can be quickly toggled between by pressing down the thumbwheel itself, though having the ISO placed in the quick menu area would have made more sense.
Just behind the shutter there’s also a Focus button that opens up the autofocus area controls: the HX100V provides Multi (auto), Centre (middle-point only) or Flexible Spot AF (can be user-placed) options. Focusing is quick off the mark and the majority of the screen is available as a focus area, though there is a finger-sized outermost edge where focusing is not possible. Close-up focusing works well at the wider angle settings, but this quickly falls off as the zoom extends - don’t expect to be near to subjects and obtain focus at the fullest focal length (this wouldn’t be possible with any camera).


Sony being future-thinking there’re also a bunch of modes that plump out the specification: firstly there’s GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) technology that will track your location and add this data to images’ EXIF data. These “geotags” are a great way to organise images or albums by location or other similar use. Secondly there’s a 3D capture option, but this one may have less appeal overall. We’re not anti-3D, but to pull it off successfully it needs to be done right. Snapping two images through a single lens and then meshing them together in-camera doesn’t provide the integral twin-lens, distance separation or manual control that are key for 3D shots. That’s not to say it doesn’t work - the resulting MPO files look fine enough on a 3DTV or device, but Avatar this isn’t. Then, of course, there’s the latest iSweep Panorama mode - an update upon the HX1’s original that now shoots taller, more resolute files with all the live sweeping motion and clever in-camera stitching of the original. Resulting files are 1080 pixels high, but that’s the same vertical resolution as a Full HD television so there’s plenty of detail to be had.
Speaking of HD, the HX100V also delivers a Full HD 1080p movie mode at 50 frames per second (60fps for the US release) using the company’s AVCHD carrier and H.264 compression. Files are immediately replayable on the camera, but the native MTS file format will need to be converted to MOV for most computer-based players and editors (excluding VLC). The movie mode itself is automated - point the camera and it’ll continuously focus and auto-adjust exposure. The one and only manual control here is real-time exposure compensation adjustment that can prove particularly useful.
Single shooting is complemented by a continuous shooting mode that can snap away at up to 10 frames per second. Fast though this is we couldn’t get the camera to shoot any more than 10 in succession.



Image quality

But the big question of them all has to be about image quality. Just how good are the HX100V’s images? The short answer would be “ok” rather than “great”. Sony has put a standard 1/2.3-inch-sized compact sensor into the HX100V’s body but then crammed some 16.2-megapixels onto this small space. Apart from the marketing benefits this may give the company it does absolutely nothing to enhance the resulting image quality for the end user. In fact it hinders it compared to a lower resolution sensor. Although the ISO 100-200 settings are of good enough quality, examine them at actual pixel size and there’s notable softness and over-sharpened artifacts that result from processing. Here’s where RAW shooting would have come in handy for more user control - though there are three-level controls for Sharpness, Colour Saturation, Contrast and Noise Reduction to add that extra lick of detail (it’s only possible to see the results off-camera though, so you’ll need to tweak with the settings and view files in full before you know what suits). Above ISO 400 and image quality becomes even more limited, meaning the HX100V isn’t ideal for high ISO, low-light work - a shame when considering the success of Sony’s Twilight mode as found in its current compact camera range. However exposure is always accurate throughout the zoom range and scenes exude realistic colours whatever the ISO settings.


Those looking for a DSLR alternative be warned: although the HX100V will provide a zoom range beyond almost anything else on the market in a small and single package, the final image quality is the compromise. Sony should have stuck with a 10- or 12-megapixel sensor and tweaked it as best as possible to give the utmost quality. Casual users will be more than happy with its image quality that’s more than good enough for a variety of tasks, it’s just those looking to use full resolution files for critical detail prints won’t get quite everything here.