Built hobby the DX7630 is a 3x outstrip lens, statue to a 39-117mm skyrocket on a 35mm camera, with trappings threads on the body thud whereas attaching an adapter considering accessory conversion lenses and filters. The camera's autofocus mechanism uses a multi-zone system to "find" the primary subject closest to the lens. The AF area is highlighted in the LCD display with a set of brackets. You can change the AF area to read only the center of the frame through the Record menu, or choose Selectable AF, which lets you set the AF area at center, or to the left or right of center. Additionally, you can choose between Continuous and Single AF modes. The DX7630 has a maximum aperture ranging from f/2.8 to f/4.8, depending on the zoom position. Focus ranges from 24 inches (60 centimeters) to infinity in normal mode, with a Wide Macro mode ranging from 2.75 to 27.5 inches (7 to 70 centimeters). Telephoto Macro mode focuses from 11 to 27.5 inches (28 to 70cm). A Landscape focus mode fixes focus at infinity, for distant subjects and scenery. In addition to the 3x optical zoom, the DX7630 also offers as much as 4x Advanced digital zoom, which effectively increases the camera's zoom range to a total of 12x. Keep in mind though, that digital zoom decreases the overall image quality, since it just stretches the center pixels of the CCD image. For composing images, the DX7630 offers both a real-image optical viewfinder as well as a generous, 2.2-inch color LCD monitor.
The DX7630 is not unlike with Kodak's EasyShare camera besides printer docks, which name hassle-free wienie downloading again printing. You plainly place the camera curiosity the dock (the DX7630 comes with a adaptable insert that fits the camera bottom snugly into the dock) and press the Connect button on the dock. The dock station also serves as an AC adapter and in-camera battery charger. Built into the DX7630 are 32 megabytes of internal memory, but the camera also features an SD/MMC memory card slot so you can expand the camera's memory capacity. I highly recommend picking up at least a 64-megabyte card (preferably a 128 MB one) right away, given the camera's 2,856 x 2,142-pixel maximum resolution size. For power, the DX7630 uses a Kodak EasyShare Li-Ion battery pack, or the optional AC adapter. Since the camera does not accommodate AA-type batteries, I highly recommend picking up a spare battery pack and keeping it on-hand and freshly charged. That said though, the DX7630's battery life is excellent, with a worst-case runtime of over two hours in record mode with the LCD on, and over 13 hours with the LCD off. The camera comes with a battery charger in case you don't have the accessory dock. Also packaged with the DX7630 are USB and AV cables, as well as a software CD loaded with the EasyShare software for downloading and managing images.