Olympus's 2MP Camedia compact — 3x 38-114mm f/2.8-4.9 zoom, SmartMedia, AA power; US name D-520 Zoom
The Olympus Camedia C-220 Zoom was a 2-megapixel consumer compact released in 2002, announced alongside the cheaper fixed-lens C-120. In North America it was sold as the D-520 Zoom, and its clamshell-style sliding lens barrier carried on a classic Olympus design cue.
It matched a 2-megapixel 1/3.2-inch CCD, good for 1600x1200 images, with a 3x optical zoom of f/2.8-4.9 equivalent to 38-114mm. An optical viewfinder was joined by a 1.5-inch 114,000-dot LCD, movies recorded at 320x240 and 15fps, storage went to SmartMedia cards with USB storage-class transfer, and two AA batteries provided power in a 112x62x35mm, 220g plastic body.
It appeals to collectors of early-2000s digicams and anyone after the soft, low-resolution CCD look at pocket-money prices. The optical finder and AA power make it forgiving to run, though two megapixels limits prints beyond postcard size.
SmartMedia is the key purchase consideration: cards ceased production long ago, so a bundled tested card and reader significantly raise a listing's worth. Beyond that, check the sliding barrier switches the camera on cleanly, AA contacts are corrosion-free, and the zoom and flash both operate.