Samsung's 2014 Wi-Fi travel zoom — 16.3MP BSI CMOS, 21x 23-483mm equiv f/2.8-5.9, touchscreen, 1080p.
The WB350F was a Wi-Fi-equipped travel-zoom compact announced by Samsung at CES in January 2014 as the successor to the WB250F in its Smart Camera range. Samsung pitched it as an 'art compact' with a leatherette-trimmed retro finish in several colours, and it arrived near the end of Samsung's camera business. A WB351F variant designation also appears in Samsung documentation.
It carried a 16.3-megapixel 1/2.3-inch BSI CMOS sensor behind a 21x zoom covering 23-483mm equivalent at f/2.8-5.9, with optical image stabilisation. The rear held a 3.0-inch touch-sensitive 460,000-dot LCD. Unusually for the class it offered full manual exposure control alongside auto modes, plus full HD 1080p video, a range of digital effects, and built-in Wi-Fi with NFC for Tag & Go pairing and direct image transfer to phones.
The long 23-483mm range in a coat-pocket body makes it a one-camera travel option, with the BSI CMOS sensor giving it more low-light headroom than the CCD compacts it superseded, and manual modes give learners something to grow into. The Wi-Fi features were designed around 2014-era apps and servers, so smart functions may be limited today even where basic transfer still works.
On the used market check the touchscreen responds across its whole surface and the long zoom runs smoothly to full extension without hunting. The proprietary rechargeable battery and its charging arrangement should be present, as chargers are less generic than AA-powered rivals; storage is by memory card so confirm the slot type with the seller. Expect the companion smart-device features to be partly defunct since Samsung exited the camera market.