Kodak's simple 12MP compact — 3x zoom, 2.7in LCD, Li-ion power; retail sibling of the M341
The EasyShare MD41 was a late-line Kodak digital compact with documentation dated 2009, sold as a retail-channel sibling of the EasyShare M341 and aimed at first-time digital camera buyers. It arrived near the end of the EasyShare programme, shortly before Kodak's consumer camera business wound down.
It carried a 12-megapixel sensor, a 3x optical zoom and a 2.7-inch LCD with no optical viewfinder. Shutter speeds ran from 8 seconds to 1/1400, face detection and scene presets handled exposure automatically, and clips recorded as MOV video files with sound. Storage was SD/SDHC card plus internal memory, and power came from a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.
It suits casual snapshooters who want automatic operation with no learning curve; there are no manual exposure controls. The 12MP count outruns the small sensor, so fine detail smears at higher ISOs, but daylight snaps are respectable and the slim body slips into any pocket.
Check the lithium-ion battery still holds charge and that a compatible charger is included, since official spares are long discontinued. Test all buttons and the zoom rocker, inspect the LCD for bleed or cracks, and format an SD card in-camera to confirm the slot reads reliably.