According to Wikipedia, the first self-contained (portable) digital camera was invented in 1975 by Steven Sasson of Eastman Kodak, but consumer digital cameras weren't widely available until the late 1990s. I have been a photographer shooting film since the late 1970s. In 1999, I decided to try out this new technology by purchasing a Kodak "Digital Science" DC-220 1 megapixel digital camera with 2x optical zoom (29-58mm full frame equivalent focal length).
By mjtmail (tiggy) from Gt. Manchester - kodak DC220 zoom, CC BY 2.0
That's right - a camera that features a whopping, massive 1 megapixel resolution (1152x864, by coincidence the screen resolution of a Sun 3/60 workstation that I used in the late 1980s so I am quite familiar with it). By today's standards, the camera doesn't perform as well as the cheapest smartphones with a camera, but in those days 1 megapixel was a respectable resolution. Some digital cameras on the marketplace offered only 640x480 resolution, which meant the images were only suitable for viewing on a VGA monitor. Kodak promised that the image quality was good enough for 5x7 inch prints, and for the most part they were.
The camera retailed for around A$2,000 (I can't remember the exact price) which makes it nearly A$3,500 in today's dollars (enough to buy a very decent camera these days).
Camera Features
Here are some of the specs of the camera, so you can see what paying that amount of money will give you in 1999:
Lens | Optical zoom with full-frame equivalent of 29-58mm (crop factor 4.76), filter size 37mm |
Digital zoom | 2x (in addition to optical 2x) |
Aperture | f4.0-4.8 (min aperture f13.5-16.0) |
Sensor | 1/1.76" (~ 7.27 x 5.46 mm) CCD |
ISO | 140 (fixed) |
Resolution | 1095 x 823 (camera processing extrapolates this to 1152x864 to give the marketing spec of "1 megapixel") |
Focus | fixed (50cm to infinity), macro at 20cm |
Viewfinder | Optical (2x), 87-91% coverage |
Shutter Speed | 1/2-1/362 second |
White Balance | Automatic plus 8 presets |
Exposure Compensation | ±2 EV range, in 1/2 EV steps |
Metering | Multi, Center-weighted, Spot |
Image Format | FLASHPIX (FPX), JPEG |
Flash | Built in, with red eye reduction (in-camera processing) |
Flash range | Wide: 0.5-3.0m Telephoto: 1.0-2.7m |
Flash modes | Auto, Fill-In, Red-Eye reduction, Off |
Shooting Modes | single, burst (continuous), 10-sec timer delay, time-lapse, remote (infrared) |
Continuous Rates | 0.1-12fps, up to 2 images (max resolution) or 8 images (640x480) |
Timelapse | 16 settings (1min-24 hour interval) |
Display | 2" LCD 72,000 pixels |
Storage Format | CompactFlash (8MB card supplied) |
Operating System | DigitaOS |
Programmability | Digita scripts |
Interfaces | USB 1.0, audio/video out, IrDA, RS-232 |
Microphone | built-in (mono) |
Speaker | built-in (mono) |
Battery | 4xAA (removable) |
Size | 118 x 56 x 108 mm |
Weight | 550g |
Kodak DC-220 technical specifications
Looking at the above specifications, it's clear that the optical aspects are mediocre - even smartphones have better light capture and auto-focus. However, it's also interesting that some features took advantage of the digital format and are present even in today's advanced cameras: white balance settings, in-camera processing (including digital zoom and red eye reduction). Some other interesting camera processing features include timestamping and watermarking.
Another interesting "feature" was the ability to embed a short audio recording (recorded using the built-in microphone) into the image files, so that you can annotate the image with a brief commentary around the shooting conditions, place, your thoughts at the time etc.
And when was the last time you could buy AA batteries to feed your camera?!
One interesting feature was the ability to "program" your camera and for it to run third party "apps" via the Digita scripting language - I wish more modern cameras have this and there is a viable ecosystem for third party camera apps (Sony tried hard to enable this on their recent cameras but have not been entirely successful).
Image Quality and Post Processing
To be honest, I've never really liked the image quality of this camera, so I never took a lot of pictures over a 3 year period (1999-2002). The fixed focusing is optimised for subjects about 1-2m, so most of the landscape and architecture images I took ended up looking a bit soft. The noise level from the CCD sensor is never objectionable but can be quite high even in bright settings, with vertical banding and colour/luminance noise.
I ended up taking around 1,200 images on this camera. Looking at them today I would say I am surprised by how well some of them turned out, and how disappointing some images ended up.
In processing these images for this retrospective, I scaled up the original resolution 4x by using Topaz Gigapixel AI, then used ON1 Photo Raw to process the result. On some images, I have used macphun's Noiseless CK for noise reduction, but surprisingly the majority of images did not require additional processing.
Sample Images
First of all, here are some images that shows on a good day, the camera can take fairly decent images, that are comparable to smartphone images after post-processing:
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On closer distances, the camera can also deliver reasonable images with detail and good colour saturation:
Low Light
The camera surprisingly can handle handheld low light images reasonably well, despite the fixed ISO of 140. Here are some examples, including one of the Sydney New Year 2000 fireworks taken from the Glebe Bicentennial Park, the interior of the Adelaide Railway Station and some images from the Australian War Memorial in Canberra:
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From the Air
Here are some rather striking images, taken on a plane from Seattle to Chicago around Feb 2000. These images were taken at sunrise shortly before the plane landed into Chicago and show the beautiful tapestry of snow covered fields and buildings that dots the Mid-West landscape.
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Here are some images of Sydney and surroundings taken from a joyride on a friend's plane:
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And On The Ground
These images were taken on a visit to Sydney Airport (I was privileged enough to be given airside access as I was working for a construction company that was renovating parts of the airport):
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Architecture
Some images of London, taken from the rooftop of a building I worked in (88 Wood St):
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This image of the Hong Kong skyline taken from Victoria Peak in 2000 is less successful (it was a hazy day):
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This photo of the interior of the Tumut 3 Power Station looks like it could almost be from a set of a 1960s science-fiction film, or the ending scene from a James Bond movie before everything gets blown up:
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This picture of the Australian War Memorial looks serene, almost "Taj Mahal"-esque:
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Lost in Time
Here's the beautiful Ashley House, several blocks down on the street we live in, before it was extended into a elderly care centre and lost most of it's charm
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And finally, here is a picture of the Mt. Stromlo Observatory, before it was tragically destroyed by bushfire in 2003 (about a year after this picture was taken).
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Finally
We hope you enjoyed this trip down memory lane as much as I did. The next article will feature images taken around 2003-2008 from a Nikon Coolpix E5700, a super-zoom camera with raw capture.