Fujifilm's entry 5MP compact — 3x zoom, 1.7in LCD, xD card, AA power, sold alongside the A360
The FinePix A370 was an entry-level compact in Fujifilm's budget A-series, sold in the mid-2000s alongside the 4-megapixel FinePix A360, with which it shares a common owner's manual. It received little press coverage compared with the near-identical A345/A350 generation, and today is documented mainly through Fujifilm's manuals and surviving retail listings.
Per the owner's manual it uses a 1/2.5in square-pixel CCD with 5.36 million total pixels, delivering 5.2 megapixels effective. The lens is a Fujinon 3x optical zoom, framing is via a 1.7in LCD, images store to xD-Picture Card, and power comes from two AA batteries — the standard recipe for Fujifilm's A-series compacts of the period.
This is a no-frills snapshot camera for beginners: automatic exposure, a handful of scene modes and simple menus. Its small screen and lack of stabilisation date it, but AA power and a real optical zoom make it a serviceable cheap CCD compact for casual or experimental use.
On the used market the A370 trades for very little. The discontinued xD-Picture Card format is the main cost trap, so examples including a card are worth more in practice. Check the AA contacts for corrosion, the flash for charging, and the xD slot pins; documentation is sparse, so a bundled manual or box is a bonus for resale.