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Camp Snap camera review: child’s play
11:30 am | November 1, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Cameras Compact Cameras Computers Gadgets | Comments: Off

Two-minute review

I first came across the Camp Snap camera when it popped up on my Instagram feed, and it stopped my mindless scrolling. It wasn’t just the dulcet tones of the voice over, or the sunny slice of America filling the screen. This retro-style compact was different, and its biggest selling point is what it lacks… a screen. 

Here I was, caught in the screen time act, watching a video about a camera originally created for kids at summer camp with no permitted screen time, who could still use it to take a few snaps of their trip. It might well hope to be one of the best cameras for kids, and in a similar category to the fun Fujifilm Instax Pal, but I think the Camp Snap will attract a much wider audience than just kids.

The retro Camp Snap camera is a clever idea; it’s a low-cost, low-tech digital reimagining of the single-use disposable camera. We all need less screen time, plus I think we all need to practice a little patience. And the low-tech Camp Snap is just what we need, because it brings us back to a happier and simpler time. No screen, no instant review of your photos. 

Camp Snap Camera in the hand illuminated by high contrast window light

(Image credit: Future)

It might look like an attractive disposable camera, but instead of film the Camp Snap can store around 2,000 digital 8MP photos on an included TF memory card (that’s the same design as a microSD card). The first time you see your photos is when the Camp Snap camera is connected via its USB-C port to upload them to your computer. 

It’s a bit like the digital version of getting your developed roll of film back from the lab weeks after the event. For me, regularly using the best cameras available today, such delayed gratification feels like a distant memory. There’s no film cost, either, which is a godsend in a time where prices have skyrocketed.

In use, the Camp Snap is point-and-shoot, all-auto simplicity for all the family. It’s child’s play; my three rambunctious kids had no problems operating the camera, and I haven’t been protective over this rigid plastic camera at all – the makers label it "drop-proof". 

Underside of the Camp Snap camera with USB-C port

(Image credit: Future)

You get a viewfinder, which is pleasant enough though somewhat interfered with by the red glare of the LED photo counter. There's also a built-in LED flash that you can turn on or off and which could benefit from being more powerful (I’d use it for any condition except bright sunlight), a thumb groove on the camera’s rear that gives a little hold, plus the USB-C port doubles up to charge the battery. With no power-hungry features, the battery should last several days of moderate use. 

The camera is powered up by a long press of the shutter button, followed by an upbeat audible confirmation that you're in business. You also get a shutter noise every time you take a photo – these are fun little features for a kid-friendly camera.

Top of the Camp Snap camera, in the hand

(Image credit: Future)

I do need to manage your expectations of the Camp Snap. Image quality is on-par with a single-use disposable film camera from yesteryear; in other words, poor by 2023’s standards. The low-cost and tiny 2560 x 1920 pixel image sensor, paired with a moderate wide-angle fixed focus lens, doesn’t even come close to the image quality of a modern smartphone and works best in bright light.

With a focus range of around 1m to infinity, I found selfies at arm’s length are possible, but anything closer is blurry. 

If I were to suggest a couple of design changes, moving the LED photo counter to the side would counter glare when using the viewfinder, plus a loop to attach a wrist strap would be nice.

Rear of Camp Snap camera and it's LED photo counter

(Image credit: Future)

Camp Snap camera photo samples

Image 1 of 14

Anglican church in the sun, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 2 of 14

Old shoe repair shop, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 3 of 14

Selfie taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 4 of 14

Sunset over field with wooden fence, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 5 of 14

A wet London at night, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 6 of 14

Boathouse and calm lake, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 7 of 14

Hilly open vista, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 8 of 14

Guineapigs, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 9 of 14

Quaint old shop on British high street, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 10 of 14

Old car with hilly backdrop, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 11 of 14

Flodded heathland on cloudy day, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 12 of 14

Selfie taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 13 of 14

Waiting for the underground, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)
Image 14 of 14

A wet London at night, taken with the Camp Snap camera

(Image credit: Future)

Above image quality and features, the Camp Snap frees us up for real connection with what’s around us. That’s what I want from a camera experience – like the Fujifilm Instax Pal, I've really enjoyed having the Camp Snap around for moments with family and friends, and it's brought me back to a happier and simpler time.

Who knew that a camera’s best feature could be something that it doesn’t have? The Camp Snap has inspired me to make a habit of folding away the vari-angle screen of my professional mirrorless camera. Basic it may well be, the Camp Snap concept has somehow struck a chord. 

Camp Snap: Price and availability

Available in the US and Europe now, the Camp Snap costs $55 / £45 plus shipping costs from the Camp Snap website, and is available with a leather-effect trim in Brown, Aqua, Black, Forest Green, White or Pink. I had the all-black version. The makers of Camp Snap have plans to expand sales beyond Europe and North America, including Australia. 

I've also been informed that a second version of the Camp Snap camera is in the pipeline, that addresses a few snags including a loop for a wrist strap, plus there’s a ‘Pro’ version in the pipeline with more features that sounds less appealing to me.

Should I buy the Camp Snap camera?

Camp Snap Camera in the hand illuminated by window light

(Image credit: Future)

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

How I tested the Camp Snap camera

I had the Camp Snap in my pocket for several weeks, grabbing quick snaps around family life, across a varied range of scenarios and times of day. My children have had a similar amount of use from the camera and I have enjoyed seeing them give it a spin and using the viewfinder. 

First reviewed October 2023

vivo X100 series will arrive on November 13, Watch 3 to tag along
9:59 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The vivo X100 series is set to arrive on November 13 at 7 PM Beijing time. The date and time were confirmed during a presentation at the Vivo Developer Conference, an event that was saw the debut of the China-only Origin OS 4. The company will also introduce vivo Watch 3 with Blue OS at the event. Few details are available about its new operating system for wearables at this point. vivo X100 series, Watch 3 posters This is not the first time vivo officially acknowledged the existence of vivo X100. So far, we've seen the phone's design in a post by a company exec, a benchmark on...

Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ launched in Korea
8:30 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

The Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+, unveiled earlier last month, debuted today in South Korea. It comes in a single 4GB/64GB memory configuration in Graphite and Silver colors, with the latter exclusive to Samsung's official Korean website. The Wi-Fi-only model of the Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ is priced at KRW368,500, while the 5G version costs KRW418,000. The Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ is powered by the Snapdragon 695 SoC and runs One UI 5.1-based Android 13 out of the box. It's built around an 11" 90Hz LCD of 1,920x1,200-pixel resolution. The tablet has a dedicated microSD card slot for...

Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ launched in Korea
8:30 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

The Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+, unveiled earlier last month, debuted today in South Korea. It comes in a single 4GB/64GB memory configuration in Graphite and Silver colors, with the latter exclusive to Samsung's official Korean website. The Wi-Fi-only model of the Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ is priced at KRW368,500, while the 5G version costs KRW418,000. The Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ is powered by the Snapdragon 695 SoC and runs One UI 5.1-based Android 13 out of the box. It's built around an 11" 90Hz LCD of 1,920x1,200-pixel resolution. The tablet has a dedicated microSD card slot for...

OnePlus Nord N30 SE is coming: a rebranded Nord N30, itself a rebranded Nord CE 3 Lite
2:50 am |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

While everyone is anxiously waiting for the upcoming flagship, the OnePlus 12, OnePlus is also working on another new device, this one much cheaper. Well, "new" if you have a very flexible definition of the word. We're talking about the OnePlus Nord N30 SE, which just got certified by TDRA in the UAE. So far so good, and this certification actually reveals the name. But it also gives us the model number: CPH2605. And that's the model number of both the Nord N30 launched in North America, as well as the Nord CE 3 Lite. Those two phones are identical devices sold under different names...

Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC review: great performance for the price
11:58 pm | October 31, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Computers Computing Computing Components Gadgets | Tags: | Comments: Off

Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC: Two-minute review

The Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC is the best version of a difficult card to recommend generally, but it goes a good way towards ameliorating the biggest issue I had with the AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT: its price.

The Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC is available for $439.99 (about £360/AU$695), which is only $10 less than AMD's official MSRP for the RX 7700 XT, so it's not the biggest savings here, but it does make this card at least somewhat more competitively priced with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti, which comes in at $399.99 (about £320/AU$630).

However, it's not just a price cut off the reference MSRP from AMD that makes the Gigabyte RX 7700 XT card a good bargain. You also get some extra perks over AMD's reference specs to make it more enticing as well, making it one of the best graphics card options for midrange gamers on a tighter budget.

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Starting with the design, you get a triple-fan design that definitely helps thermal performance, which isn't egregious on the RX 7700 XT to begin with. There is no reference card for the RX 7700 XT, mind you, but given that the AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT does have a reference card that sports a dual-fan design, you do get something over the higher-tier AMD card.

That's not nothing, and the card itself isn't so long that it can't fit inside a typical midtower PC case. The RX 7700 XT does require a good bit more power than the RTX 4060 Ti (245W to the 4060 Ti's 160W), so it needs two 8-pin power connectors to run it. On the other hand, it doesn't require a 16-pin power cable like the rest of Nvidia's reference RTX 4000-series cards.

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

The Gigabyte card also lacks any real RGB lighting beyond the Gigabyte logo along the top edge of the card, which is either a good thing or a bad thing, depending on your perspective, but it's good to have options regardless. Non-RGB fans will appreciate the more subdued aesthetics of this GPU for sure.

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

In terms of ports, you have your standard 2 x HDMI 2.1 and 2 x DisplayPort 2.1 output on most AMD RX 7000-series cards, so you can hook it up to several of the best gaming monitors of your choosing.

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Performance-wise, you can read more about the individual benchmarks in my RX 7700 XT review, and for the most part, the Gigabyte RX 7700 XT Gaming OC card performs a few percentage points better than the XFX Speedster QICK319 RX 7700 XT Black card given that it has about 100MHz higher game clock and a roughly 55MHz faster boost clock.

The difference is only going to be a few fps depending on the game you're playing, but given the Gigabyte card is cheaper, you're really getting extra FPS for less money, which is a fantastic deal no matter how you look at it.

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

In the end, then, the Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC makes a strong case for the RX 7700 XT, especially if spending north of $400 is really stretching your budget to the max. My original criticism that the RX 7700 XT is just too close in price to the AMD RX 7800 XT to make it the best 1440p graphics card to buy still applies to this card, but Gigabyte at least offers more than a non-OC card at a better price to make it a much more palatable purchase if you can't go for the RX 7800 XT.  

Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC: Price & availability

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)
  • How much does it cost? $439.99 (about £360/AU$640)
  • When is it available? Available now
  • Where can you get it? Available in the US, UK, and Australia

The Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC is available now for $439.99 (about £360/AU$695). This is cheaper even than the AMD reference spec's MSRP of $449.99, and offers a better value by giving you some extra performance thanks to its factory overclocking.

It also brings you closer in price to the Nvidia RTX 4060 Ti while generally outperforming it. All in all, this is still too expensive to be the best cheap graphics card on the market, but it's definitely the best cheap midrange graphics card you're going to find.

Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC: Specs

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Should you buy the Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC?

A Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC on a desk

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Buy it if...

You want great 1440p performance on a tighter budget
This card offers great 1440p performance for the price, especially if you can't stretch your budget to the RX 7800 XT.

You want some extra overclocked performance for free
Normally, OC cards cost more than the reference card, but this one actually costs less than AMD's official MSRP.

Don't buy it if...

You can stretch your budget to get the AMD RX 7800 XT
With the AMD RX 7800 XT offering such incredible performance, if you can stretch your budget to get that card (especially the Gigabyte Radeon RX 7800 XT Gaming OC), you absolutely should.

You want better content creation performance
If you're a content creator working with 3D rendering or other GPU intensive creative workloads, chances are an Nvidia card is going to offer much better performance than anything AMD can offer.

Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC: Also consider

How I tested the Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC

  • I spent about three weeks with the Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC
  • I used it to play games, produce and edit creative content, and more
  • I used our standard battery of benchmarking tools to test it

I spent about three weeks with the Gigabyte Radeon RX 7700 XT Gaming OC, running my standard suite of benchmarks as well as assessing its general performance in real-world use cases.

I paid special attention to its gaming performance, since this is specifically targeting gamers, and paid less attention to its content creation performance since non-Radeon Pro cards are generally not marketed for those purposes.

I've been a computer hardware reviewer for years now and have tested all the latest graphics cards of the past several generations as well as having nearly a decade of computer science education, so I know my way around this kind of hardware. What's more, as a lifelong gamer, I know what to expect from a graphics card at this price point in terms of gaming performance.


We pride ourselves on our independence and our rigorous review-testing process, offering up long-term attention to the products we review and making sure our reviews are updated and maintained - regardless of when a device was released, if you can still buy it, it's on our radar.

Read more about how we test

First reviewed October 2023

YouTube’s blocking of ad blockers isn’t a “small experiment” anymore
9:58 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Back in June, YouTube announced that it was running a "small experiment" globally where it urged a tiny subset of people using ad blockers to disable them if they want to view content on the platform. This is no longer a "small experiment". YouTube now says it's launching a global effort to crack down on ad blockers and encourage users to either allow ads or pay for YouTube Premium (where there are no ads). This comes straight from YouTube communications manager Christopher Lawton. When you run into YouTube's ad blocker block, you'll see a message like the one in the screenshot...

YouTube’s blocking of ad blockers isn’t a “small experiment” anymore
9:58 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Back in June, YouTube announced that it was running a "small experiment" globally where it urged a tiny subset of people using ad blockers to disable them if they want to view content on the platform. This is no longer a "small experiment". YouTube now says it's launching a global effort to crack down on ad blockers and encourage users to either allow ads or pay for YouTube Premium (where there are no ads). This comes straight from YouTube communications manager Christopher Lawton. When you run into YouTube's ad blocker block, you'll see a message like the one in the screenshot...

Oppo Find N3 Flip review
8:06 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones reviews | Comments: Off

Doogee T30 Ultra, T20 Ultra and T20mini Pro tablets announced
6:41 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Doogee announced a trio of new Android tablets varying in size from the 8.4-inch T20mini Pro to the 11-inch T30 Ultra and 12-inch T20 Ultra. The two larger-screen tablets offer entry-level specs with MediaTek Helio G99 chipsets and boot Android 13. Doogee T30 Ultra T30 Ultra boasts an 11-inch IPS LCD with a 1,600 x 2,560 px resolution and an 8MP front-facing camera. The display features Widevine L1 support for streaming services and has a TUV SUD Blue light certification. The rest of the spec sheet includes 12GB RAM and 256GB storage which is expandable via the microSD card...

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