January 8, 2009 9:00 AM PST

Does Sony DSC-G3 camera get wireless right?

by Lori Grunin

Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-G3

The DSC-G3 includes an embedded Web browser.

(Credit: Sony Electronics)

Wi-Fi-enabled cameras have been around for several years, but arguably never took off because they never hit on the right combination of performance and capabilities; at various points we've seen powerful Wi-Fi but subpar photo quality, good cameras but with limited Wi-Fi capabilities, or simply middling all around. Now Sony's giving it a shot with the Cyber-Shot DSC-G3, and it looks like the company may at least get the feature side of the equation right.

The 10-megapixel, 4X zoom G3 includes 4GB of storage and a 210ppi 3.5-inch touch-screen display with Wi-Fi connectivity that allows you to wirelessly upload photos and video and deliver e-mail notifications. Unlike other implementations, the G3 gives you the tools to navigate and connect to networks, for instance, behind the terms-of-service agreement screens on public and hotel hot spots, via an embedded Web browser. The combination of organization tools and sophisticated and selective upload greatly expands the usefulness of both aspects of the camera. It includes free AT&T Wi-Fi access to Sony's Easy Upload Home Page until January 31, 2012.

Of course, like the others, this model may turn out to have performance or photo-quality flaws. And some may find $499 a bit pricey. But hope springs eternal. We'll find out when we get it in; that should be soon, since it's shipping now.

Senior Editor Lori Grunin has been covering digital imaging for two decades, but her memory's kind of sketchy on the details. You can hear about it every week on Indecent Exposure, the podcast she co-hosts with Matt Fitzgerald.
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by iamrexmantooth2 January 8, 2009 10:30 AM PST
sounds very promising!
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by Zandora777 January 12, 2009 2:04 PM PST
This is only a "first" because its integrated (not an option). Kodak released the EasyShare One which used a WiFi antennae in a second SD slot several years ago. Too bad we aren't seeing more cameras with this integrated. For this to be successful, it should automatically upload photos to your home PC if you are taking pictures in your house, without having to manually "push" them. Also, once there is WiFi, the camera should be able to browse the internet as well. This is not a stretch at all, since you already need TCP/IP for the WiFi and the camera has a large display anyway.
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by bone6689 January 12, 2009 3:44 PM PST
why would you want to surf the internet on your camera?? Thats what computers and now cell phones can do. NO ONE uses a point and shoot THAT much so they can surf the internet on it. pointless, if you ask me... however, the automatic upload would be cool as well, thats why they should also include a Bluetooth antenna as well
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by middlebass January 14, 2009 5:14 PM PST
Interesting features, but not quite enough info even for a review without hands-on testing. If you don't tell us whether the camera takes RAW as well as JPG images, many of us will waste time taking a closer look only to find that the camera is just for beginners.
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by pepestudio_dotmac March 3, 2009 1:27 PM PST
It's still a nifty device, a digicam with wifi capabilities. I wish for it to have flexibility in wifi-connections meaning, not just connecting to computer or wifi-router, but connecting the wifi camera to a wifi-enabled PDA such as iPhone and Blackberry. That way, you can email or upload to your own blog (wordpress anyone?) without having the need to upload very low quality photos coming from iPhone's small camera. I don't want to upload any of my high quality photos to a online photo gallery provider such as Flickr and others.
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