Why People Prefer the Elph Digital Camera

Posted by Dave Jackson on August 11th, 2008 at 02:22pm

If you’re in the market for a PowerShot SD850 IS ELPH Digital Camera, we will show you where the best prices are and aren’t. How may we help you? Make an informed decision on canon powershot sd750 digital elph Digital Cameras before you buy.

I also have a Kodak DC240, which takes 1280×800 pictures at 500k which look as good as the Elph’s 1.5MB resolution. The big winning point with the Elph is the true “pocket” size. And it takes really great pictures and video too! I’ve been very impressed with the features as well — so many!

Now, you don’t even have to worry about camera shake getting in the way of perfect pictures. So you can create images that are sharp, clear and bright - just like you want them to be. Since an equivalent camera can be bought new for $250 (with a new warranty) and we kinda wanted something with better picture quality, we opted not to bother repairing that old camera. I haven’t seen a single blurred picture out of all the pictures I’ve taken so far.

Canon’s lens shift OIS provides an effective antidote to camera shake, particularly at longer zoom lengths or during long exposures when even the slightest hand-held shake is magnified to picture blurring proportions. Superior to electronic image stabilization systems that simply use software to mask movement, OIS actually shifts the lens proportionately to compensate for unwanted motion, making it easier to snap great images and smooth movies, even when the camera is hand-held or in low light conditions. Canon pioneered the stylish camera concept in 1996 with the first ELPH camera, an APS film model designed to take great pictures and fit stylishly into the consumer lifestyle. With each PowerShot Digital ELPH camera that Canon introduces, the company continues to focus on style, fashion and the distinctive look and feel of the ELPH line, a look that many competitors have often imitated, but never duplicated. This makes your pictures as sharp as possible, even in low light or using the long telephoto lens. The SD-870 has 8.0 megapixels of shooting power coupled with a new high resolution 3.0 inch LCD (230,000 pixels) with wider viewing angles.

Taken at a low resolution, that part of the picture will look so pixelated that you’d think you were staring at one of your son’s Lego projects. With more, smaller pixels, that same piece of the shot will stand a better chance of looking like its target. The processor enhances picture definition, vibrancy and quality, while helping increase the speed of the cameras’ startup, autofocus, shutter response, playback and image processing speed and reducing power consumption by 35 percent compared to the original DIGIC chip. Image transfer speed is accelerated (when used with a USB 2.0 compatible computer, printer or other peripheral), thanks to the inclusion of a Hi-Speed USB 2.0 port. You can send pictures from the camera to a computer, either directly in a peer-to-peer link or to a computer on an existing Wi-Fi network. You can send pictures to a printer, either directly to one equipped with a wireless adapter, or to a printer attached to a PC with which you’ve established a wireless connection.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Under Main Content

Leave a Comment for Why People Prefer the Elph Digital Camera

Required

Required, hidden

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Recent Blog Posts

Categories

Posts by Month

Blogroll