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The Casio EX-TR100, more popularly known as the TRYX, is a completely unique product that does away with most of the rules of camera design, employing an adaptable frame that can literally be twisted into countless different positions. Other key featu...
One can't help suspect that the Casio EX-TR100 or Tryx is a curio in search of an audience, and one that might not actually exist, at least in large numbers. It could herald a whole fleet of Tryx cameras but we doubt it; Casio hasn't exactly rushed to...
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The Casio EXILIM TRYX EX-TR100 is certainly a one of a kind camera. As much as we give it kudos for its originality, brush away all that hype and the TRYX TR100 is full of design holes, lacks in features and isn't targeted at the more cas...
Unique design...
No optical zoom, clunky touchscreen design for accessing options, no flash, light bleed and flare, processing issues in highlight areas...
The Casio EXILIM TRYX EX-TR100 is certainly a one of a kind camera. As much as we give it kudos for its originality, brush away all that hype and the TRYX TR100 is full of design holes, lacks in features and isn't targeted at the more casual user. Ima...
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The 12-megapixel Casio Tryx ($249.99 direct) marks a radical design departure from your average digital camera. It's a pocket camera with a swiveling tripod built right into it. Having a tripod in your back pocket opens up a whole new world of photo op...
Built-in tripod. Sharp images. Good low-light performance. Sharp, articulating LCD. Slim build. 1080p video capture. Extremely wide lens. Built-in HDR and 360 degree panorama features.
No optical zoom or optical image stabilization.
With its flipping, swiveling, built-in tripod, wide-angle lens and slim build, the fun-to-use Casio Tryx may appeal to self-portrait fans and party photographers, but serious shooters will be turned off by the features it's missing. Buy it now...
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Given the sheer quantity of marketing muscle that Casio put behind the Tryx, you'd think the company was gearing up to rival Nikon and Canon in the DSLR space. Instead, out popped the outre device you see above. Without qualification, this is one of the s...
Incredibly slim and portable, Fantastic 1080p movie mode, Reasonably priced...
Awful battery life, Proprietary charging port, No optical zoom...
Casio's Tryx (EX-TR100) is far and away the most interestingly designed point-and-shoot that we've seen in years, but the compromises made to end up with a needlessly unique design continues to haunt it. The only logical benefit to the swivel-based form f...
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The TIPA Design Award goes to innovative products that combine form and function in new and unique ways, and that is why we choose CASIO EXILIM TRYX EX-TR100. Offering 'freestyle' shooting, the Casio can be used equally well by right and left-handed p...
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If you've heard of the Casio Tryx ($250), it's most likely due to the camera's innovative, twistable design. The Tryx was one of the most intriguing announcements of CES 2011, with a shape-shifting body that can be used as a tripod, hung on a hook, adj...
240-fps high-speed shooting mode, * Good low-light performance, * Versatile physical design...
Touchscreen can be unresponsive, * Digital zoom only, * Fixed battery, Price when rated: 250...
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If you've heard of the Casio Tryx it's most likely due to the camera's innovative, twistable design. The Tryx was one of the most intriguing announcements of 2011, with a shape shifting body that can be used as a tripod, hung on a hook, adjusted to al...
The Tryx is a category-busting device, equal parts camera, pocket camcorder and Voltron Starshooter, and it performs most of its tasks surprisingly well. However, it does have its fair share of drawbacks: It has no optical zoom at all, most camera con...
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If you've heard of the Casio Tryx ($250 as of 7/19/2011), it's most likely due to the camera's innovative, twistable design. The Tryx was one of the most intriguing announcements of CES 2011, with a shape-shifting body that can be used as a tripod, hun...
240fps highspeed shooting mode, Good lowlight performance, Versatile physical design...
Touchscreen can be unresponsive, Digital zoom only, Fixed battery...
The shape-shifting Tryx offers good performance. It's a hard gadget to classify, but it works best when you make use of its twistable frame to overcome awkward lens placement and controls when employing it as a normal camera...
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The Casio Tryx hits the market with an intriguing design that tests our preconceptions about camera design (and our ability to refrain from making puns about sleeves). Armed with a 12.1-megapixel backlit CMOS sensor and a 3-inch touchscreen, the Tryx...
We simply have to applaud Casio for their design of the Tryx. Where most camera companies are falling over themselves to release the same cameras with, at best, minimal improvement, Casio has spared no innovation in the design of this camera. The rota...
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Compact camera design hasn’t really evolved that much for many years; most changes are typically cosmetic ones, usually involving buttons being moved around the camera body. Not playing it safe this time, Casio has gone the creative (and bold) route wi...
The Exilim EX-TR100 gets points for being unafraid to push the boundaries of compact camera design, though we did feel that it is still a product at an early stage of development due to its limited shooting modes and sluggish menu. The camera's target...
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