Kodak's entry 2MP digital compact from 2003 — fixed 37mm-equiv lens, 1.6in LCD, SD/MMC cards, AA power
The Kodak EasyShare CX6200 was an entry-level digital compact announced in June 2003, at the bottom of Kodak's EasyShare CX line. It was designed around Kodak's dock-based EasyShare system, which aimed to make transferring and printing photos as simple as possible for first-time digital camera owners.
It used a 2-megapixel CCD behind a fixed lens equivalent to 37mm, with 3x digital zoom but no optical zoom. Framing was via an optical viewfinder or the 1.6-inch indoor/outdoor LCD, storage combined 8MB of internal memory with an SD/MMC card slot, and it connected over USB 1.1. It offered a basic movie mode, flash with auto, red-eye, fill and off settings, ran on two AA batteries and weighed about 142g.
This is a camera for nostalgia shooters and collectors of early-2000s digicams rather than practical photography: resolution is low, the lens is fixed and the screen tiny. Its CCD output has the punchy early-digital colour some buyers now seek out, and AA power makes it easy to run today.
On the used market, check the battery contacts for corrosion from old AA cells, confirm the flash and shutter work, and inspect the LCD for bleed or scratches. SD/MMC cards remain easy to source, though cameras of this age often reject high-capacity modern SD cards, so a small-capacity card is useful for testing.