The NV15 has a standard set of shooting modes, but as far as I could tell, most of them are quite adaptive in case you forget to switch the scene mode after clicking the desired shot. It's not advisable, but it still shows how little the camera restricts a casual shooter.
Besides the regular feature set, the NV15 also has an Effect mode. Here you have access to fun stuff like funny frames, image compositing, and the option to shoot multiple pictures and turn them into an animated GIF file from the camera itself. As juvenile as it may sound, this feature was actually the most appreciated feature when I showed the camera to any of my friends.
Even the post-processing options in the camera are impressive. You have the usual options to crop and resize images, you can change the color tone to black and white, sepia, negative, red, green, etc. along with an option to remove red eyes. As good as these may be, I wish there was an option to correct the exposure of the images in the editing options. That would have made the package complete.
In our performance tests, the Samsung NV15 scored pretty well overall. It took just a little over a second to start up and the same time to power off. Shot-to-shot time gap without flash was around two seconds. These timings make the camera pretty fast when compared to others in its category.
Colors seemed a bit saturated, but that's expected from a camera aimed at mainstream consumers. Expect your pictures to look 'happy'.
The sharpness levels were great even with the kind of detail captured in landscape shots.
Though shooting at sensitivity levels higher than ISO 400 would be inadvisable, the camera does perform very well in its Night Landscape scene mode. As you can see below, it has done a pretty decent job of making the most of available light without showing much digital grain.






