I have had the Canon SX110IS for almost a calendar month, and I highly advocate it. It is a bit larger, but it just makes up for it with the 10x zoom. It's not an SLR, the photographic camera comes with feature a full non-automatic style where you can determine focusing, aperture, and exposure time. The digital image stabilization does a good job of preventing your images blur-free too.
The feature that caused me buy SX110IS was its image stabilization system. Friends who use digital cameras professionally all told me that Canons optical image stabilised zoom scheme was the most serious in its price array. Due to a slowly worsening quake, this has became an essential issue.
The digital zoom is surprisingly impressive. Recently, I taken a game and my place was actually far. From that distance, I was able to get photos of players at bat, that captured particular facial characteristics. I was even able to get some very solid images of players in action.
From a 10x visual zoom lens to advanced Canon technology that automatically makes you the best shot, the 9.0-megapixel SX110 IS packs astonishing respect.
Solid picture character for a compact camera, lens corner to corner acuteness, minimum colour fringing, and detail vs noise tradeoff are all greater than other cameras in its class.
Three inch LCD screen with 230k resolution, standard specs for bran-new generation cameras today. Viewable from a great angle, and visible in bright sunny terms.
The software system interface is out-of-date and unintuitive sometimes. Turning auto ISO shift on should automatically transfer the ISO, not expecting the press of the "print" button after half pressing the shutter. Some of the characteristics require a lot of button pushes. Besides auto-power off mode only has choice of off or 3 mins, and lens retract in playback is either rapid or 1 min, there should be values in between.
The camera settings are easy to utilise, and evenly smooth to access. The Auto placing is fairly idiot proof and does a good job under a wide sort of terms. I found the SX110 to be decent, well made yet still small enough to suit into a laptop computer carrying bag.
I never imagined that I would buy anything then than a Nikon, but at present I guess this was one of the hottest buys that I have taken in a long time. It presents on its promises, creating photos whose quality rivals those of much more expensive digital photographic cameras. - 16752
The feature that caused me buy SX110IS was its image stabilization system. Friends who use digital cameras professionally all told me that Canons optical image stabilised zoom scheme was the most serious in its price array. Due to a slowly worsening quake, this has became an essential issue.
The digital zoom is surprisingly impressive. Recently, I taken a game and my place was actually far. From that distance, I was able to get photos of players at bat, that captured particular facial characteristics. I was even able to get some very solid images of players in action.
From a 10x visual zoom lens to advanced Canon technology that automatically makes you the best shot, the 9.0-megapixel SX110 IS packs astonishing respect.
Solid picture character for a compact camera, lens corner to corner acuteness, minimum colour fringing, and detail vs noise tradeoff are all greater than other cameras in its class.
Three inch LCD screen with 230k resolution, standard specs for bran-new generation cameras today. Viewable from a great angle, and visible in bright sunny terms.
The software system interface is out-of-date and unintuitive sometimes. Turning auto ISO shift on should automatically transfer the ISO, not expecting the press of the "print" button after half pressing the shutter. Some of the characteristics require a lot of button pushes. Besides auto-power off mode only has choice of off or 3 mins, and lens retract in playback is either rapid or 1 min, there should be values in between.
The camera settings are easy to utilise, and evenly smooth to access. The Auto placing is fairly idiot proof and does a good job under a wide sort of terms. I found the SX110 to be decent, well made yet still small enough to suit into a laptop computer carrying bag.
I never imagined that I would buy anything then than a Nikon, but at present I guess this was one of the hottest buys that I have taken in a long time. It presents on its promises, creating photos whose quality rivals those of much more expensive digital photographic cameras. - 16752