The camera is compact and really has no design features to speak of, being the shape of a thick phone. Rounded edges and recessed lens that comes out when you power the camera on, the only bump is on the right side where the battery goes. On the back, you have 3 buttons: mode/EV, timer and focus, and a film rewind button. These buttons on the back could be larger, as they are not easy to press. The top has a power button as well as the shutter button. That is the extent of this camera’s features.

Powering the camera on extends the lens, which is uncovered and unprotected when powered off, a flaw in the camera. A friend kept his camera in a pocket, accidentally hitting the power button, ejecting the lens and ruining the camera as it jammed.

The mode/EV button on the back is where all the features are hidden. Auto flash is the default setting on the camera, but pressing the mode/EV button toggles red-eye reduction, flash on, flash off, and -1.5 or +1.5 exposure compensation. You can toggle these features with the camera on or off, however, turning the camera off resets the camera to default. A common complaint is that the camera does not retain settings when powered off, which is annoying. You can, however, set the camera before turning it on.

The timer/focus button toggles between a time, infinity focus, or timer and infinity focus. This can also be set with the camera on or off, but defaults back to timer off and close focus.

Unfortunately, I cannot find any other information about this camera. I am not sure what the shutter speeds vary between, the metering pattern, what apertures the camera has or how it chooses them, and frankly, I don’t care. The real joy of this camera is its simplicity in both design and features. While I had and enjoyed using the Contax T2, a real tank of a point and shoot, it has a raft of features, -2 to +2 exposure compensation, auto mode, aperture priority, features that I rarely used in a point and shoot. Personally, I don’t want that many features, that is why I have my Nikon F3.