Sony announced its three new entry-level dSLRs for 2009, the Alpha DLSR-A230, A330, and A380, which replace the
Canon and Nikon don't even seem to participate in the $650-ish price segment the A330 inhabits. Nevertheless, it can't compete on size against Olympus' amazing shrinking dSLRs; its viewfinder will look a bit smaller than both thanks to the lower magnification factor and it has a slower burst frame rate. But that 9-point AF has the potential for faster focus.
Sony Alpha DSLR-A330 | Olympus E-450 | Pentax K2000 | |
Sensor | 10-megapixel CCD | 10-megapixel Live MOS | 10-megapixel CCD |
Sensitivity range | ISO 100 - ISO 3,200 | ISO 100 - ISO 1,600 | ISO 100 - ISO 3,200 |
Viewfinder | 95 percent coverage 0.74x magnification | 95 percent coverage 0.92x magnification | 96 percent coverage 0.85x magnification |
LCD | 2.7-inch tiltable | 2.7-inch fixed | 2.7-inch fixed |
Live View | Yes | Yes | No |
Video | No | No | No |
Continuous shooting | 2.5fps | 3.5fps | n/a |
Autofocus | 9 points | 3 points | 5 points |
Dimensions (WHD, inches) | 5.0x3.8x2.8 | 5.1x3.6x2.1 | 4.8x3.6x2.7 |
Weight ounces; add about 1.8 ounces for battery and card | 17.3 | 13.4 | 18.5 |
Price | $649 (with 18-55mm lens) $849 (with 18-55mm and 55-200mm lenses) | $699.99 (with 14-42mm and 40-150mm lenses) | $699.95(with 18-55mm lens and flash) |

Sony's research shows that most people stepping up to these classes of dSLRs are looking for better photo quality and performance but want to retain the simplicity of the point-and-shoot experience (a premise I agree with). Of course, there's always the green Auto mode on every dSLR, but the big challenge is moving people from that to using a lot of the features that make dSLRs a lot better than their old snapshot cameras. For instance, Canon has its Creative Auto mode, described in the review of the
The Sony Alpha DSLR-A330 will be available in black in July; the brown version will ship later this year.