Olympus's 2MP entry Camedia (C-120 in Europe) — fixed-focus 35mm-equiv f/4 lens, SmartMedia, AA power, 2002.
The Camedia D-380 was the North American name for the camera sold in Europe as the Camedia C-120, a 2-megapixel entry-level digital compact introduced in 2002 and made in China for Olympus. Both badges circulate on the UK used market, with D-380 the more common listing form; the two are the same camera.
It uses a fixed-focus 4.5mm f/4 Olympus lens (35mm equivalent) of five elements, stopping to f/8, sharp from 0.6m to infinity with a close-up switch covering 0.25-0.6m. There is a 1.6-inch 60k-pixel TFT LCD, a built-in flash effective to about 2.5m, digital zoom of 2.5x at full resolution, panorama and two-in-one composite modes, SmartMedia storage, USB transfer under a rubber flap, and power from four AA cells.
A sliding front panel covers the lens and doubles as the power switch, Mju-style, making it a genuinely pocketable snapshot camera. It suits collectors of Y2K-era digicams and anyone after low-resolution CCD character; fixed focus and 2 megapixels keep expectations firmly at casual-snapshot level.
On used examples, work the sliding panel repeatedly — it is the power switch, and a worn contact means a dead camera. SmartMedia cards are long discontinued and scarce, so an included working card is worth paying for, while AA power remains painless. Check the small LCD for bleed and confirm USB transfer or a card reader route for getting files off.