Thursday, November 24, 2011

Never Buy A Canon PowerShot SD870IS Digital Camera

!±8± Never Buy A Canon PowerShot SD870IS Digital Camera

Believe it or not, the SD870IS PowerShot by Canon is one of their best sellers ever, both online, and through bricks and mortar retailers. This PowerShot has a nice compact size, image stabilization, face detection, nice video quality and a generously sized 3 inch LCD screen. But with a lot of products, you need to look a little closer, to find the imperfections. If your even considering buying a Canon PowerShot SD870IS Digital Camera, there are a few negative points you need to be aware of.

Taking good indoor pictures can be the bane of many point and shoot cameras in this price range, and the Canon SD870IS unfortunately is no exception. While outdoors, with plenty of natural light, the SD870IS (as well as just about every camera) takes very nice photos. Great color, high image quality, and well lit. But indoors is another story. The camera seems to have a hard time deciding when would be an appropriate time to use the flash. This quite often results in an overexposed subject, with a background that seems bathed in shadows.

Canon also made the unfortunate decision with the PowerShot SD870IS to exclude an optical viewfinder. I've seen a lot of point and shoot cameras move in this direction, and it's a real pet peeve for me. Having an optical viewfinder on a camera is not a big expense, and actually gives the consumer more choice in how he or she takes pictures. With more pressure on the manufactures to provide larger LCD screens, the viewfinder is being sacrificed. Being able to use a viewfinder to frame your pictures when your batteries are being sucked dry by over-sized LCD screens, and an undersized battery capacity is a nice option.

A few other complaints with the Canon SD870IS Digital include:

- less than stellar results at high ISO settings

- exposure setting is non adjustable

- far too many photos exhibit red eye subjects

- shooting videos restricts manual adjustments of focus and zoom settings


Never Buy A Canon PowerShot SD870IS Digital Camera

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS Or SD780 IS - How Do These Family Friendly Pocket Cameras Compare?

!±8± Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS Or SD780 IS - How Do These Family Friendly Pocket Cameras Compare?

A very quick glance at the specifications of these two compact pocket cameras shows that they are almost identical. Here are some of the similarities:

Size: 3.4" wide by 2.2" high by 0.7" deep LCD: 2.5" with 230,000 pixel resolution Zoom: 3x with very similar focal equivalents Image Quality: both are excellent for compact pocket cameras Aperture: not exactly equal but not enough difference to make a case one way or the other ISO range: auto, or 80-1600 White Balance selection: 6 positions and manual preset Image Processor: Canon Digic 4

The differences are only in the Megapixels and the video capability. The Canon PowerShot SD780 IS has a whopping 12 megapixel image sensor, while the Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS has only a 10 megapixel image sensor. If you are a megapixel watcher, this may be enough for you to go for the SD780 IS, but it really is not enough of a difference to base your final decision on.

The biggest difference is in the video capture feature. The Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS has decent video with capacity of capturing 640x480 video at 30fps (frames per second), which is similar to previous pocket cameras. However, the Canon PowerShot SD780 IS has the capability to capture HD video at 1280x720 pixels and 30 fps. This is the same video capability and format as some much higher end cameras.

So, if you want to be able to show your pocket camera video on your HD TV with excellent quality, the Canon PowerShot SD780 IS is the camera for you. The additional is well worth the upgrade in video.

If video is not your thing, then by all means, save the and get the Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS. The image quality for still photos is pretty much identical. Use the money you save to get a memory card for your new family pocket camera. (By the way, you will have to spring for the memory card with the SD780 too, in order to record that great video.)


Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS Or SD780 IS - How Do These Family Friendly Pocket Cameras Compare?

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