Konica Minolta DiMAGE X50 is best treated as a Minolta/Konica Minolta DiMAGE X-series pocket camera built around the slim folded-zoom look collectors still search for. Judge this exact model around its 2004 release context, 5 MP, compact CCD sensor, 37-105mm equivalent, 2.8x folded optical zoom, and SD / MMC setup instead of the brand name alone.
What owners like
People still look for Konica Minolta DiMAGE X50 because it gives a real-camera flash workflow, brand-specific color and menus, and a tactile body that feels different from a phone. The useful part is the exact mix of 37-105mm equivalent, 2.8x folded optical zoom, SD / MMC, and the model's size when the seller proves the actual unit works.
Common complaints
Common complaints are folded-zoom or lens-cover failures, weak tiny batteries, dim old LCDs, SD/MMC card confusion, and sellers not proving that the camera writes a fresh image. For Konica Minolta DiMAGE X50, the practical risk is the 2004-era condition: Konica Minolta compact rechargeable battery means the charger, spare battery cost, and whether the pack still holds charge matter; SD / MMC is easier than older formats, but early models may still care about low-capacity cards; and 37-105mm equivalent, 2.8x folded optical zoom and lens cover should open cleanly, since tiny pocket cameras are easy to damage in bags.
What to compare
Use Konica Minolta DiMAGE X31, Konica Minolta DiMAGE Xg, Canon PowerShot SD110 DIGITAL ELPH, and Canon PowerShot SD20 DIGITAL ELPH as the real comparison set for Konica Minolta DiMAGE X50. Compare pocket size, direct-flash look, charger availability, screen condition, and whether trend pricing is hiding a weak unit; the best buy is usually the listing with clearer working proof and easier accessories, not the one with the most familiar name.
Built from this model's specs plus source-backed review / Reddit / model list owner patterns.