This is a simple compact-class camera that has an extra special feature: it can record slow-motion video.
Here is a short clip of some Larus ridibundus eating breadcrumbs, filmed in 8x slow motion (240fps). Click on the image to the right to view or download the video. Playing time 63s, file size 4.6MB (hand-compressed to DIVX from the original 49MB MJPEG).
The FH100 can also record in 30fps (actually NTSC-compatible 29.97fps), 120fps, 480fps, and 1000fps. But the 480 and 1000 fps modes are mostly just gimmicks, the resolution and compression quality is very low. Here is a short 1000fps film of a Sympetrum sanguineum:
A still image of Sympetrum sanguineum:
The FH100 can also take "bursts" of still images at 30fps and 9 megapixel resolution. There is even a continuous-shooting mode where you can set the camera to start recording up to 25 frames before you press the shutter button. This can be used to eliminate reaction time and other types of triggering delays. Here is an example:
The time interval between each picture above is approximately 33ms.
Note: the EXIF timestamps mark the time when the JPEG image is created after the exposure, not the time of exposure itself.