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Note: this camera was first sold in Apr 2008. There may be newer versions available.
Kodak EasyShare V1073 IS
Kodak EasyShare V1073 IS
C+
HQ Grade: C+
A is outstanding and exceptional, rated in the top 10% of digital cameras.
B means they are good, with some standout features.
C means they are mediocre, and probably more trouble than they are worth.
D & F mean they are absolutely awful or old. Avoid at all costs.
  • 4 out of 5
"Awesome for lake parties, sports, and clubs"
  • 4 out of 5
"Good little camera"
See rating based on 64 user reviews
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Question Answered!
jimmy (doglover) 25 pts

I installed the sd memory card but I can't see how many pictures I have left.. In movie mode it says 20 m

I changed the memory from camera to card, but I don't know how many pictures I have on the card, it's 4 mg .. I know your supposed to have like 500 but where does it display that.
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Brenda P (BrendaP) 28728 pts
July 11, 2008 5:06 PM
1 people rated this answer helpful, 0 people rated this answer not helpful
 
You know, I've never looked for this info, but I'm almost certain it doesn't tell you anywhere. Reason being that the number of photos will vary a lot, particularly depending on your image resolution. You might shoot half the card on high res and then lower the picture quality for the other half, and because the quality of the photo will affect how many you can save, the camera can't really predict how much space/ how many photos you have left.
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jimmy (doglover) 25 pts
July 12, 2008 4:38 PM
0 people rated this answer helpful, 0 people rated this answer not helpful
 
Brenda, thank you for your response. I understand what you mean, I am in the printing business but this is not acceptable from kodak if this is true, Each setting should let you know how many pictures you have when you change resolution on the camera, one of the problems with that I don't even know if the sd card is even working unless I take pics till I run out. The camera is great, but this is a problem unless you carry memory cards & guess whats left. I hate to guess, this movie mode tells you, but the resolution is always set. I hope your not right in a good way I mean that...

Thank you..
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jimmy (doglover) 25 pts
July 14, 2008 3:45 PM
0 people rated this answer helpful, 0 people rated this answer not helpful
 
Brenda, thank you for your response. I understand what you mean, I am in the printing business but this is not acceptable from kodak if this is true, Each setting should let you know how many pictures you have when you change resolution on the camera, one of the problems with that I don't even know if the sd card is even working unless I take pics till I run out. The camera is great, but this is a problem unless you carry memory cards & guess whats left. I hate to guess, this movie mode tells you, but the resolution is always set. I hope your not right in a good way I mean that...
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Brenda P (BrendaP) 28728 pts
July 21, 2008 12:17 AM
0 people rated this answer helpful, 1 people rated this answer not helpful
 
I just noticed recently in a Nikon camera manual some wording to the effect of "While shooting in movie mode, time remaining is displayed in upper corner. While shooting still photos, number remaining will depend on quality of photos and other factors." So, it kind of sounds like something nobody is going to actually put into print just because it varies so much. I do agree it would be very handy info to know!
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HippieMagic (HippieMagic) 4 pts
October 16, 2008 1:28 AM
1 people rated this answer helpful, 0 people rated this answer not helpful
 
Hit the info button... it says it in the upper middle part of the screen. It should be over 1000 or close to it. It is well over 500 pictures though. My camera still has around 1256 left and I took about 30.
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labontefan 0 pts
September 8, 2009 7:17 PM
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Hit the Review button to look at the last picture you took. Then push the info button ("i") twice to bring up the setting menu. In the upper right corner it will show the number of the picture you are viewing, so if you're looking at the last picture you took, the number should indicate how many pictures you've taken.
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