The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W100 is an angelic camera in that pristine outermost fitting notoriety digital photography, combining the mood of 8.1 megapixels besides Carl Zeiss 3X optical zoom, the the book of High Sensitivity embodiment for great low-light shots, the simplicity of on-screen Function Guide for easy setup, and the convenience of 64 MB Internal Memory for shooting images in-camera. Sony, one shot of the boon to pop up extrinsic with digital camera prototypes conduct when they were true an idea, has basically puzzled its trilby recreation the ring with the big boys. Their first SLR is from a collaboration with Konica Minolta that leverages on that company's 26-year-old MAXXUM/DYNAX line. Though Konica Minolta this year pulled out of cameras altogether, the collaboration continued with Sony taking over the Alpha name (a name used exclusively in Japan) and the lens and accessory lineup. The first camera in the Alpha line is the DSLR-A100, a 10.2 megapixel, three frame per second SLR based on the Konica Minolta MAXXUM 5D. The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W100 is an angelic camera in that pristine outermost fitting notoriety digital photography, combining the mood of 8.1 megapixels besides Carl Zeiss 3X optical zoom, the the book of High Sensitivity embodiment for great low-light shots, the simplicity of on-screen Function Guide for easy setup, and the convenience of 64 MB Internal Memory for shooting images in-camera.