Nikon Coolpix 4600 4MP with Nikon’s exclusive In-Camera Red-Eye Fix, red eyes may be a thing of the past. Nikon’s renowned In-Camera Red-Eye Fix technology automatically detects and corrects red eyes in most typical situations without the need to press buttons or select and highlight the eyes in playback.
Nikon’s exclusive new D-Lighting feature is another new addition that can turn throwaway shots into frame-able memories. The D-Lighting feature can be selected in Playback mode, automatically compensating for insufficient flash or excessive back lighting in order to obtain balanced exposure throughout the frame. The Coolpix 4600 is also equipped with Blur Warning, another feature unique to Nikon, which alerts the user when a shot is compromised by camera or hand shake, allowing another shot to be taken before leaving the scene.
The Coolpix 4600 is also phenomenally easy to use. In fact, it’s been designed to appeal not only to beginners of all ages, but also to people who’ve never even considered buying a digital camera before. With a redesigned graphical user interface (GUI) that lets the user navigate functions by either menu item list or icon, it enables the beginner to find the right mode at the right moment to achieve the best results, time after time. Furthermore, with a handy new Help button that displays a description for each selected function on the main menu, the process has been made easier than ever before.
Helpful consumer’s review
Everything about this camera is great, the picture quality is excellent, it’s small, it’s not too heavy, that is until you start taking pictures with the flash, it’s a catastrophe. If you take a picture with a flash it will take about 2-3 seconds to write to the memory card, then the screen will turn off while the flash recharges for another 5-8 seconds. Too many people here glossed over that particular fact and it’s really a deal breaker, because for the same price you can buy a Canon elph, one of their S series cameras like the SD200 and the picture quality is better, it uses rechargable batteries not AA’s and it doesn’t have this ridiculous flash lag. The flash lag on this nikon 4600 is totally unacceptable, if you add up the numbers you’re looking at 7-11 seconds per picture, and if you choose not to use the flash then you won’t have a usable picture, because the picture won’t come out dark it will come out blurry, which makes no sense but that’s what happens. This camera was a gift and I feel bad i gave it to someone, my regular camera is a Kodak DX7440 and it shoots pictures instantaneously with no flash lag it costs about 50 dollars more.


















