![]() ![]() The Nikon P2 is super compact and very lightweight, with a rugged metal body that should withstand lots of wear and tear. And of course, there's the built-in wireless capability. But there's no optical viewfinder, the flash has been repositioned, and the LCD has grown to 2.5-inches. The Nikon Coolpix P2 bears a superficial resemblance to the Coolpix 7900, with all automatic controls and an extremely small form factor. The new Nikons add wireless image transfers to this line of user-friendly models while enhancing a wide range of Scene modes and zapping red-eye with face recognition software to help novices capture good photos in tricky situations. The 5.1-Megapixel Nikon Coolpix P2 and its higher-resolution sibling, the 8-megapixel P1, are the latest in a long line of Coolpix digital cameras whose popularity began with the original Coolpix 900, Nikon's first "breakthrough" digicam. (The only substantive feature differences are that the P1 has an 8 megapixel sensor, 32 megabytes of internal memory and a minimum ISO of 50, while the P2 has a 5.1 megapixel chip, 16 megabytes of internal storage, and a minimum ISO of 64.) If you're already familiar with the P1, you can save yourself a lot of reading, by jumping directly to the Test Results section below, to see how this model performed in our image quality and timing tests. NOTE: The Nikon Coolpix P2 is very similar to the Nikon Coolpix P1, which we previously reviewed. ![]()
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