Kodak's 8.2MP EasyShare compact from 2008 — 3x zoom (36-108mm equiv), 2.4in LCD, VGA video, AA power
The Kodak EasyShare C813 was an 8.2-megapixel budget digital compact announced in January 2008, part of the value-oriented C-series near the end of Kodak's compact camera years. It offered a high megapixel count for very little money and was a common supermarket and gift purchase in its day.
An 8.2-megapixel 1/2.5-inch CCD with sensitivity up to ISO 1250 sat behind a 3x optical aspheric autofocus zoom equivalent to 36-108mm. The 2.4-inch LCD handled framing, video recorded at 640x480 and 30fps, and features included digital image stabilisation, 16 scene modes, three colour modes and on-camera editing tools. Storage combined 16MB internal memory with an SD/SDHC slot, and two AA batteries provided power.
As a user camera it is a simple daylight point-and-shoot; as a purchase today it attracts the CCD-digicam crowd, who like its Kodak colour rendering and AA-battery convenience. Stabilisation is digital only, so care is needed in dim light, and the plastic body scuffs easily but survives well.
Check the AA compartment for leakage damage, confirm autofocus locks and the zoom travels its full range, and look for LCD scratches. SD/SDHC compatibility makes memory easy to source, though very large modern cards may not be recognised; test video, flash and the shutter before buying.