Olympus's 2005 starter 5MP compact — 2.8x zoom from 38mm equiv, xD card, AA power; sold as X-705.
The Olympus FE-110 launched in 2005 together with the 4-megapixel FE-100 as the opening models of the budget FE series. The FE-110 was the 5-megapixel step-up of the pair, and the official manual pairs it with the regional badge X-705 (the FE-100 with X-710), so UK listings appear under both names.
Specification centres on a 5-megapixel 1/2.5-inch CCD and a 2.8x optical zoom from a 38mm-equivalent wide end. The rear LCD is 1.5 inches at 130,000 dots, sensitivity spans ISO 64-400, and operation is fully automatic with scene modes rather than manual control. Images store to xD-Picture Card, and two AA batteries give roughly 160 shots per set of alkalines.
This was Olympus's simplest digital camera by design: point-and-shoot ease for family snaps and holidays, with AA power a practical plus for travel. The narrow ISO range and small screen make it a daylight camera first, of interest now mainly as a cheap way into mid-2000s CCD compacts.
The xD-Picture Card dependency matters most on the used market — cards are discontinued, so examples sold with one are worth seeking (the FE-110 also caps each card at 10,000 frames, an obscure quirk). Check for lens-extension errors, dead pixels on the small LCD, and clean output from the ageing CCD.