Kodak's 7MP EasyShare compact — 37-111mm equiv 3x zoom, 2.5in LCD, SD/MMC storage, 2007.
The Kodak EasyShare M753 was a slim 7-megapixel compact announced in June 2007 as part of the style-led M-series, launching in the UK at around £99. It was aimed at buyers wanting a thin, colourful snapshot camera, and sold in black, silver, purple, copper, pink and blue finishes.
It couples a 7-megapixel CCD with a Kodak-branded 3x optical zoom covering a 37-111mm equivalent range, framed on a 2.5in 154k-pixel LCD with no optical viewfinder. Face detection and digital image stabilisation assist the 18 scene modes, sensitivity spans ISO 80-1250, and video records at VGA resolution with sound. Storage is 16MB of internal memory plus an SD/MMC slot, with Kodak's Share button for tagging uploads.
It suits casual shooters who valued pocketability and simple operation; there is no manual exposure control and low-light performance is limited, but daylight snapshots have the characteristic CCD-era Kodak colour that attracts retro digicam buyers today.
Check the lens extends and retracts cleanly and the LCD is free of pressure marks, as thin M-series bodies transmit pocket wear. Confirm the correct battery and USB lead are included and that the battery still charges, and test an SD card in the slot — internal memory alone holds only a handful of frames.