Olympus's 2003 budget Camedia — 3.2MP CCD, 3x zoom, xD storage, AA power; sold as D-560 Zoom in the US
The Olympus Camedia C-350 Zoom was a 3.2-megapixel point-and-shoot announced on 2 March 2003, pitched at the competitive entry end of the digital compact market. In North America the identical camera was sold as the D-560 Zoom, so both names describe the same body; it preceded the similar C-370 Zoom of the following year.
It carries a 3.2-megapixel CCD delivering a maximum 2048x1536 pixels, behind a permanently attached 3x optical zoom with an f/3.1-5.2 aperture range and up to 10x combined with digital zoom. Shutter speeds run from 2 seconds to 1/1000. Storage is xD-Picture Card (16-256MB cards were typical at launch), it records 320x240 and 160x120 QuickTime motion-JPEG video at 15fps, and it is powered by two AA batteries.
It suits collectors and casual shooters after a cheap early-2000s CCD digicam: simple automatic operation, pleasant base-ISO colour, and AA convenience. Resolution is modest by any modern standard and video is a token feature, so treat it as a daylight stills snapshooter rather than an everyday camera.
The xD-Picture Card slot is the key check — the format is discontinued and cards are collector-priced, so bundled cards matter. Verify fresh AAs power the camera, the zoom extends without sticking or error messages, the flash charges, and the LCD is free of bleed; inspect the AA bay for corrosion after long storage.