Kodak's 9.2MP EasyShare compact from 2009 — 3x zoom (34-102mm equiv), 2.7in LCD, face detection
The Kodak EasyShare M320 was a budget 9.2-megapixel digital compact announced in January 2009, one of the entry models in Kodak's M-series of slim, colourful point-and-shoots sold in the last years of the EasyShare programme before Kodak left the camera market.
It used a 9.2-megapixel 1/2.5-inch CCD with a 3x optical zoom equivalent to 34-102mm at f/2.8-5.1, plus 5x digital zoom. The 2.7-inch LCD handled framing, sensitivity ran from ISO 80 to 1600, and features included face detection, digital image stabilisation, blur reduction and Kodak Perfect Touch processing. It recorded VGA video, stored to SD/SDHC cards, and measured 97x60x21mm at about 155g.
The M320 is a simple pocket camera for casual snaps, now mostly of interest to buyers chasing the late-2000s CCD compact look on a small budget. There is no optical stabilisation or manual exposure, and low-light performance is weak, but SD/SDHC support makes day-to-day use painless.
Confirm the camera comes with its battery and charger, as Kodak accessories are long discontinued and third-party stock varies in quality. Check the lens extends cleanly without error messages, the LCD is unmarked, and sample images show no CCD streaking or dead pixels before buying.