Praktica's slim 3.1MP digital compact — SD storage, built-in flash and LCD, mid-2000s budget model
The Praktica DC Slim 315 was a slim budget digital compact sold in the mid-2000s under the Praktica brand of Pentacon of Dresden, part of the DC Slim series of thin, card-styled digicams that traded on the old East German camera name after the company had moved to sourced digital products.
The camera records 3.1-megapixel images and stores them on SD cards, with Kingston's compatibility database listing official support for cards up to 2GB in a single SD slot. Retail listings describe a built-in flash, a rear LCD screen, digital zoom rather than an optical zoom, and additional modes including short video clips and use as a PC webcam over USB. Praktica did not publish detailed sensor specifications for this model.
This is a Y2K-era convenience camera rather than a photographic tool: small, light and simple, with the soft, low-resolution rendering that has since gained a following among buyers chasing early-digital aesthetics. It suits casual snapshots and lo-fi digital experiments, with the usual limits of slow response and weak low-light ability.
Confirm which battery the specific example takes and that a charger or fresh cells are included, since documentation for this model is thin. It predates SDHC, so only SD cards of 2GB or under work; check the LCD for bleed or scratches, the USB socket, and that images write and transfer correctly.