Vivitar's early-2000s 2MP digicam — fixed 7.5mm f/2.8 lens, 1.6in LCD, 16MB internal memory, AA power.
The Vivitar ViviCam 3695 was an entry-level digital compact from the early 2000s, sold in the era when the Vivitar name was applied to inexpensive imported digicams alongside its photographic accessories. It was a basic fixed-lens model pitched at first-time digital buyers through general retailers; a 3695B variant is also documented.
It uses a 2.0-megapixel CMOS sensor recording images at up to 2048x1536 through a fixed 7.5mm f/2.8 lens with a macro position and 4x digital zoom but no optical zoom. A 1.6-inch LCD handles framing and review, images store to 16MB of internal flash memory, sensitivity is fixed at ISO 100, and the electronic shutter runs from 1/4 to 1/2000s. Power comes from two AA cells or one CR-V3.
Today it appeals mainly to Y2K-digicam collectors and anyone curious about early consumer CMOS image character: low resolution, harsh highlights and strong colour shifts in mixed light. As a practical camera it is limited — no optical zoom, small dim LCD and slow writes — so treat it as a novelty shooter.
Check the internal memory is readable and that USB transfer works, since files cannot be offloaded any other way on internal-memory examples. AA power makes batteries easy, but verify the contacts are clean and the LCD is free of bleed or dead rows. Confirm the flash charges and the fixed lens window is unscratched, as it cannot be serviced economically.