An Android-powered point-and-shoot camera sure sounds like the future even if it’s yet to be proven, which is why nearly two years after Nikon pushed its first Android experiment into the world, the company is trying again. How does the Coolpix S810c measure up against Samsung’s very successful Galaxy Camera?
The new Nikon Coolpix S810c sports many spec improvements over its predecessor, the S800c. The new point-and-shoot has 16-megapixel resolution, a 12x (25-300mm equivalent) zoom lens, a 3.7, 1.2 millon dot touch LCD. The older model, announced A lot has changed for connected cameras since the S800c was announced. Back in late 2012, very few cameras had Wi-Fi. Now it’s a standard feature on anything above the bottom-tier. More importantly, Samsung’s Galaxy Camera was a tremendous hit, far outselling and outperforming our expectations. It was useful and fun where we expected a gimmick.
At $US350, the Nikon Coolpix S810c comes in cheaper than the latest $450 Galaxy Camera 2. Still, Nikon has some disadvantages. Notably, its Android camera it doesn’t come with the possibility of a wireless carrier. Part of what made the Galaxy Camera amazing was everywhere connectivity. Maybe more importantly, while Nikon is one of the most respected names in imaging, Samsung’s core strength is Android products and connectivity so it’s going to be hard to beat. Nikon’s not all the way competitive yet — but at the very least, it’s offering us an alternative to Samsung’s Android camera hegemony.