Top dog for the moment, the Canon Digital IXUS 980 IS has the highest resolution in its family -- 15 megapixels -- but otherwise its specs fail to impress given its £250 price tag. That said, the IXUS 980 delivers excellent photo quality, it offers plenty of shooting options, and its looks -- while not for everyone -- are characteristic of Canon's recent willingness to play with design.
Design
The follow-up to the
The right side has a slight inward curve that provides a comfortable grip. With your middle finger in that nook and your pointer finger on the shutter button, your thumb naturally rests on the left of the mode dial, which slopes downwards to the left and positions so your thumb rests solidly between it and the raised edge surrounding the 64mm (2.5-inch), 230,000-pixel LCD screen.

Below the mode dial, you'll find the rest of the camera's buttons, except for the on/off button located to the left of the shutter and its surrounding zoom ring on top. The only problem here is that the zoom ring's tiny nub is so small that steady control could be tricky for some users.
On the back, the little directional pad for menu navigation and quickly changing flash, ISO, drive mode and focus is encircled by a rotating ring that makes zipping through options fast. It's particularly handy when shooting in Special Scene mode, with its 16 shooting selections. In the centre lies a Func button for accessing mode-specific settings. Everything is a touch cramped for our big, clumsy thumbs, but average-size or small hands shouldn't have a problem navigating.
Features
Above the LCD is an optical viewfinder for those times when the LCD may be impractical or operating in the new Quick Shot mode. As with all point-and-shoot cameras, you shouldn't count on the optical finder for accurate framing, since it doesn't show the entire frame, as the LCD does, and tends to cut off a significant portion.
In Quick Shot mode, the camera automatically adjusts focus and exposure for either faces detected in or at the centre of the viewfinder. This is all so you can shoot without prefocusing via a half-press of the shutter. It works as advertised and does well with moving subjects such as animals, children and sporting events.
If you want more control over your results, the camera offers both Program AE and Manual modes -- in the latter, you're limited to a choice between two apertures at any given focal length, and there are no semi-manual priority-exposure modes. Or if you want nothing to do with settings, you can switch it into Auto, of course. It supports move capture, but only at 30fps 640x480 pixels, unlike the 720p HD video available from other manufacturers' similarly priced models.
The 3.7x f2.8-5.8 36-133mm-equivalent lens is typical point-and-shoot, disappointing considering the camera's flagship status. The less-expensive