Casio's 2006 card-slim compact — 7.2MP CCD, 3x 38-114mm equivalent zoom, wide LCD, 17mm-thin body.
The Casio Exilim EX-S770 was an ultra-slim card-format digital compact from 2006, part of the Exilim Card line that traded on extreme thinness. At about 17mm thick and 127g without its battery, it was designed as a shirt-pocket camera for people who wanted photography without carrying anything that felt like a camera.
It paired a 7.2-megapixel CCD with a 3x optical zoom covering a 38-114mm equivalent range. The wide-format 230,000-pixel LCD was unusually bright for its day, and the camera recorded MPEG-4 movies including a 16:9 mode for widescreen televisions. Storage used SD, SDHC or MMC cards, and the proprietary rechargeable lithium-ion battery was rated for roughly 200 shots per charge.
This is a camera for casual, everyday snapshots and travel where size matters most. The slim body slips anywhere but offers little to grip, and the modest zoom and small sensor mean it rewards good light; indoors it leans on its flash. As a Y2K-era digicam it also appeals to buyers chasing early-2000s CCD colour rendering.
Confirm the proprietary battery still holds useful charge and that a compatible charger or dock is included, as Casio's slim compacts often shipped with cradle charging. Check the large screen for scratches and bright-pixel defects, verify the lens extends without hesitation, and test a card in the slot, though SD compatibility keeps storage straightforward.