Olympus's early-2000s 2MP fixed-lens compact — 36mm equiv f/2.8, SmartMedia storage; Brio D-230/C-2 elsewhere
The Olympus Camedia D-230 was an early-2000s entry-level digital compact, sold in North America under the Brio D-230 name while the same camera was known internationally as the Camedia C-2. It sat at the very bottom of the Camedia range, a fixed-lens sibling to the C-220 Zoom, aimed at first digital camera buyers.
It pairs a 2-megapixel CCD with a fixed (non-zoom) lens equivalent to 36mm at f/2.8. Sensitivity is automatic across ISO 100-400, and top resolution is 1600x1200 pixels. Storage is SmartMedia card, with a 16MB card supplied new, and connectivity is USB. A four-shot buffer gave it better shot-to-shot times than most rivals in its class, and flash modes include off, red-eye reduction and night scene. Power comes from two AA cells.
Today it is mostly of interest to Y2K-digicam collectors: 2 megapixels and a fixed 36mm lens make it a deliberate, limited tool, but the f/2.8 lens and CCD output give small files with genuine period character. AA power keeps it usable without hunting obsolete chargers.
SmartMedia is the biggest condition issue — the format died in the mid-2000s, card readers and working cards are scarce, and the camera is close to unusable without one, so a bundled card and reader add real value. Test power-up on fresh AAs, flash charge, and the SmartMedia slot's contacts; check the AA bay for corrosion.