Sony Cyber-shot QX100, QX10 are all camera, no screen (pictures)
More attention-grabbers than problem-solvers, the QX100 and QX10 are new twists on the point-and-shoot camera.
You supply the screen
If you didn't know anything about Sony's Cyber-shot QX100 and QX10 cameras, you'd probably think they were just lenses and not full cameras. Basically, Sony fit entire cameras into relatively small cylindrical bodies.
The cameras directly connect via Wi-Fi to iOS and Android devices (there are no plans for Windows Phone support), which gives you a screen for framing your shots and controlling the camera. However, if you just want to take a quick photo, you can shoot blindly using the camera's basic built-in controls.
Cyber-Shot QX100
Clip it on
There is no physical connection between the camera and your smartphone. The camera "attaches" to your device with a tension clip on the back of the camera. The fit is reasonably tight, but probably not secure enough to only hold your smartphone when it's clipped on.
It doesn't need to be clipped onto a device at all, though, so you can hold the camera in one hand (or mount it on a tripod) and shoot wirelessly.
Controls
Though you won't be able to see what you're shooting without a smart device, you can still take pictures and use the zoom lens with the camera's built-in controls.
Most of the time, you'll be using a smartphone to control the camera, though. Shooting modes include Sony's Intelligent Auto, Superior Auto (that's Intelligent Auto plus some multishot options for low-light and backlit shooting), Program Auto, Aperture Priority, and Movie. You can adjust white balance, exposure compensation, and ISO. Autofocus is multipoint and light metering is multipattern. There is manual focus, though.
The QX100 captures JPEG stills only (no raw) and record movies at 1,440x1,080-pixel resolution at 30fps in MP4 format.
NFC for easy pairing
Small, light, but not exactly pocketable
The clip
Getting inside
Battery
It uses a Sony lithium ion rechargeable battery that's pretty easy to come by. Sony claims a battery life of up to 220 shots and a movie recording time of 25 minutes.
Shooting performance sounds pretty good once it's up and running. Startup takes 6.9 seconds with a shot lag of 0.21 second and a shot-to-shot time of 1 second. This is under ideal conditions, though, so shooting in low light or wireless interference will likely slow it down.
Storage
There is a microSD card slot that can be used with cards up to 64GB. The slot will also take Memory Stick Micro cards up to 16GB. When connected to a smartphone, the camera will store full-resolution photos to the card and 5-megapixel shots to your device for easier editing and sharing.
There is also a Micro-USB port for charging the battery as well as transferring photos and movies.