Review: The Fujifilm FinePix S8000fd
You’ve graduated from point-and-shoots...what’s next?
February 2008 By Audrey GrayThe S8000fd looks like a cyclops from the front. It’s just all lens, but with very good reason. This Fuji has an astonishing 18x optical zoom, the equivalent of a 27mm (wide angle) to 486 mm (super close up) lens. To achieve this range, the lens will expand out 2 3/8 inches when fully employed, knocking your lens cap out to left field if you, like me, always forget to remove it before hitting the ON button.
Also among its impressive resume of features is a big-selling spec: 8 megapixels (printed on the front of the camera, just in case you forget to brag). The camera has some of Fuji’s trademark imaging smarts, including face-detection technology, anti-shake science, and, my favorite, the “natural light with flash” mode which takes two photos in rapid succession, firing the flash only on the second so you get to choose which one pleases you the most.
But the real draw for intermediate photogs is the ability to play with shutter speeds (how fast the little door to your digital sensor swings open) and aperture (how much light you let careen in during each shot). Aside from full-auto, the S8000fd has Programmed Auto (a photo store manager I know says, “P does not stand for professional, people!”), Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority and full Manual modes. In manual and Shutter-Priority, you can play with shutter speeds from 4 seconds (great fun if you turn off all the lights and tell your kids to dance around with a flashlight) to 1/2000 second. Apertures range from f/2.8 (if you want that trippy, fuzzed-out “bokeh” background) to f/8 (when you want an entire subject in crisp focus, front-to-back). D-SLR’s will do all this to much better effect, but that’s getting into “intermediate advanced” territory, which, frankly, will cost you upwards of two grand with decent lenses. At $399, the S8000fd is a more economical place to practice getting fancy.

