That came into the hands of a very funny copy of the company that gave us the PSx, and much more interesting;)

UPDATE: Fixed ochepyatki.
UPDATE2: Added photo
This is a camera. Let's take a look at the specifications.
- The year 1999 was not able to establish a more accurate date.
- 1/4 inch CCD matrix
- Zoom - 10 * optical 2 * digital
- Shooting resolution - 640 * 480, 320 * 240
- Lens focal length f = 4.2 - 42 mm (40 - 400mm in terms of 35 mm format) F1.8 -2.9
- Exposure - Automatic
- White Balance - Automatic
- Compression Format - Standard JPEG
- The carrier (and here attention! Drum roll) - 3.5 inch DISKET! 1.44 MB
- LCD Display
- Size - 2.5 inches
- Type of matrix - TFT
- Total number of points - 84260
- Nutrition
- Sony NP-F330 / F530 / F550
- Voltage - 7.2 volts
- Consumption during flash photography - 3 watts
- Operating temperature range - from 0 to 40 degrees C
- Overall dimensions - 137.5 * 103 * 62 mm
- Weight - about 590 grams
As you probably already guessed, the most amazing thing about this camera is FDD.
The camera is working and working, cheerfully removes and shows what it has taken, a floppy disk was found with it, it was about the same age as the camera, the most striking thing is that it has not been sprinkled yet. On one diskette fit about 20-40 shots in standard quality, and 15-20 in high. The camera rustles briskly with the drive, the feeling is simply unforgettable when after the flash the drive rustles;)
Well, then a little photo of this camera from different sides.







')
At home there was not a single working drive.
Tomorrow at work I'll take off the shooting results and put it in the article.
Thank you all, if you are interested in the topic, I can continue the topic of old cameras, including non-digital ones.

Photo 1 - Automatic exposure, flash off.

Photo 2 - Automatic exposure, flash on.

Photo 3 - Automatic exposure, flash off.

Photo 4 - With a maximum optical zoom