Olympus's 2006 entry 5MP compact — 38-114mm equiv 3x zoom, xD card, AA power; sold as X-720.
The Olympus FE-130 was a 5-megapixel entry-level digital compact from 2006 in the budget FE series aimed at first-time digital buyers. Like most FE models it wore a regional twin badge, X-720 — the official manual covers FE-130/X-720 alongside the FE-140/X-740 — and it sat just above the FE-110 and FE-120.
A 1/2.5-inch CCD with 5.4 million gross pixels produces images up to 2592x1944 through a 3x zoom of 6.3-18.9mm f/3.1-5.9, equivalent to 38-114mm. The 2.0-inch LCD has 85,000 pixels, shutter speeds span 4 to 1/2000 second with Digital ESP metering and twenty scene modes, and images store to xD-Picture Card or 22MB internal memory on two AA batteries.
It is a straightforward automatic snapshooter: scene modes instead of manual control, a usable 38-114mm range for everyday framing, and AA power that is easy to feed anywhere. The dim screen and modest ISO ceiling limit indoor and evening work, so daylight family shooting is its element.
Used buyers should budget for the discontinued xD-Picture Card format — the 22MB internal memory holds only a handful of shots, so a bundled card matters. Check the lens barrel extends without error messages, look for stuck or hot pixels from the ageing CCD, and confirm the small screen is undamaged.