Fujifilm's 2007 colourful slider ultracompact — 7.2MP CCD, 3x 38-114mm equiv zoom, xD/SD slot, NP-45 battery.
The Fujifilm FinePix Z10fd was a fashion-led ultracompact marketed from July 2007, aimed squarely at 18-35 year old snapshooters. Its curved 'aero' body came in colours including Wave Blue, Hot Pink, Sunset Orange, Wasabi Green and Midnight Black, and a sliding front cover doubled as the power switch.
It used a 7.2-megapixel CCD (5.76 x 4.29mm) with a Fujinon 6.3-18.9mm f/3.7-4.2 zoom, equivalent to 38-114mm. A 2.5-inch 150k LCD replaced any viewfinder. Face detection handled up to ten faces with automatic red-eye removal, and novelty features included an IRSimple infrared transmitter for beaming photos, a Blog mode that resized images to 640x480 and an Auction mode for multi-angle composites. Storage combined roughly 54MB internal memory with a dual xD/SD/SDHC slot, and power came from an NP-45 lithium-ion battery in a 110g body.
The Z10fd suits buyers after a genuinely pocket-sized, colourful late-2000s compact for casual snaps. There is no optical image stabilisation and period testing found soft resolution, barrel distortion and purple fringing, so treat it as a fun social camera rather than an image-quality pick.
The sliding lens cover mechanism and its power switch are the first things to test on a used example, along with the NP-45 battery and charger being present — the battery remains cheaply available. The dual slot takes standard SD/SDHC. Inspect the coverless LCD for scratches and confirm flash, face detection and the internal memory all function.