Kodak's 2003 family compact — 3.1MP CCD, 3x 37-111mm Retinar zoom, SD/MMC storage
The EasyShare CX6330 was a 3.1-megapixel compact announced by Kodak in June 2003, sitting in the middle of the CX-series above the fixed-lens CX6200. It was built around Kodak's EasyShare system, with one-button transfer via the optional camera dock, and was pitched at families moving from film to digital.
It pairs a 3.1-megapixel CCD with a 3x Kodak Retinar all-glass aspheric zoom covering 37-111mm equivalent, maximum aperture f/2.7 at wide and f/4.6 at telephoto, plus 3.3x digital zoom. Shutter speeds run 4 to 1/2000 sec. A 1.6-inch LCD handles review, storage is 16MB internal plus SD/MMC cards, and it offers sport, night, landscape and close-up scene modes with QuickTime video capture.
This suits collectors of early-2000s digicams and anyone curious about early Kodak Color Science CCD output. As a daily camera it is dated — slow to operate by modern standards with a small screen — but it is simple to use and its files have the punchy colour typical of the era.
Check the battery compartment and contacts for corrosion, confirm the lens deploys without error messages, and inspect the small LCD for bleed. It takes SD/MMC cards, but like other cameras of this generation it may reject larger SDHC cards, so test with 2GB or smaller. Docks and cables are common and cheap if missing.