Fujifilm's 2008 entry J-series pocket compact — 8.2MP CCD, 3x 38-113mm equiv zoom, xD/SD slot, 126g.
The Fujifilm FinePix J10 was the simplest model in Fujifilm's budget J series, launched in January 2008 alongside the longer-zoom J50. It targeted first-time digital camera buyers and anyone wanting a slim, fully automatic pocket camera at a minimal price.
It used an 8.2-megapixel CCD with a 3x Fujinon zoom covering a 38-113mm equivalent range, in a body measuring 91 x 55 x 19mm and weighing just 126g loaded. A 2.5-inch LCD served for framing, sensitivity reached ISO 1600 at full resolution with Fujifilm's Picture Stabilization ISO-boost mode, and movies recorded at VGA or QVGA 30fps with sound. The card slot accepted xD-Picture Cards as well as SD and SDHC, and power came from a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.
The J10 is a pure point-and-shoot: no manual exposure, no optical stabilisation, just automatic snapshots. It suits nostalgic buyers after a cheap late-2000s CCD compact for everyday carry, with the caveat that low-light shots lean on high ISO and get noisy quickly.
Used examples are inexpensive; the main check is that the proprietary lithium-ion battery and its charger are present and healthy, as replacements can cost a meaningful share of the camera's value. The dual slot takes standard SD/SDHC, so ignore xD. Verify the lens extends without error messages, the LCD is undamaged, and images are free of CCD lines.