Actually, the more you can optically zoom in on the moon and fill the frame the faster the shutter speed you need as the bright light will bleach out the details. By the looks of this, he shot it at maximum zoom. It is a 6mp camera so that affords some cropability (digital zoom) without pixelation.
I actually shot the full moon in this eclipse series at about 1/400sec
http://www.pbase.com/bobt54/image/36728856
As the moon went farther and farther into eclipse, I had to keep lowering the shutter speed until I was probably shooting the fully eclipsed moon at about 1/8 of a second. That is why it is not quite as sharp as the full moon (dam earth decided to turn

)
If you like moon pictures there was another topic on it that got quite a few responses.
http://forum.pbase.com/viewtopic.php?t=6611&highlight=moon