Kodak's 14MP EasyShare compact — 1/2.3in CCD, 32-96mm equiv zoom, 3in LCD, AA power, 2010.
The Kodak EasyShare C183 was a 14-megapixel budget compact introduced in 2010, part of the entry-level C-series and one of the last generations of EasyShare cameras before Kodak stopped making cameras in 2012. It was a common supermarket and gift camera in the UK, sold in several body colours.
It uses a 14-megapixel 1/2.3in CCD behind a 3x optical zoom covering a 32-96mm equivalent range at f/2.9-5.2, with a 3.0in 230k-dot LCD and no viewfinder. Kodak's Smart Capture scene selection and face detection handle exposure automatically, sensitivity runs from ISO 64 to 1000, video records at VGA resolution, and storage is SD/SDHC alongside a small internal memory. Power comes from two AA cells, and a dedicated Share button tags images for upload.
It was built for effortless family snapshots and remains exactly that: point, shoot and let Smart Capture decide. The late-CCD colour rendering has made C-series Kodaks popular with buyers chasing the 2010s digicam aesthetic, and AA power plus SD cards make it one of the simplest old compacts to run.
Condition checks are straightforward: look for corrosion in the AA compartment, scratches or bright spots on the large LCD, and smooth zoom extension. No proprietary battery or obsolete card format is involved, so a working example needs nothing more than fresh AAs and a standard SD/SDHC card.