Price range: £295.80
What is it: 12-megapixel compact with image stabilisation
What we think: Sleek design and fabulous image quality, but a slow performer
Canon Digital IXUS 960 IS Review
Reviewed on: 1 November 2007
Sometimes, when we find ourselves running full speed forward towards what we think is the pinnacle of achievement, we suddenly realise that we've flown closer to the sun than our wings can stand. In the current state of market-driven capitalism, we do this constantly, but luckily, our high-flying, boundary-pushing experiments don't often come with long-term catastrophic results -- instead they push technology forward.
Canon's Digital IXUS 960 IS, with its limit-pushing 12.1-megapixel CCD sensor certainly does its part to advance technology in digital cameras, and along with its attractive titanium body and 3.7x optical-zoom lens should appeal to people who absolutely have to have more pixels than the neighbours. However, the 960 IS's surfeit of pixels comes at the cost of performance speed.
Design
As has become tradition in the Digital IXUS line, the top model, 960 IS included, sports a rugged titanium body. The right side has a slight inward curve to provide 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 downward 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. The play button is recessed a little more than we'd normally like, but that's probably to prevent accidental presses, which never occurred during our field tests, and we didn't have trouble pressing it when we wanted to.
While Canon's
You shouldn't count on it for accurate framing, though, as the finder doesn't show the entire frame, as the LCD does. In our review sample, the finder cut off a significant portion of the bottom of the frame, though that may vary from one sample to the next. The finder does zoom, though, which is a step above the finders found in most film compacts of yesteryear.
Menus are split into the shooting menu, accessed by pressing the Func/Set button in the middle of the four-way rocker and the setup menu, which is activated by pressing the Menu button. We like this method, which keeps your thumb on the rocker while shooting and still lets you get to important shooting-related controls quickly when you need them. The rocker provides quick access to the most commonly changed settings, including ISO, flash, macro and landscape modes, and timer or continuous shooting modes.
Features
The 3.7x optical zoom lens covers a 35mm-equivalent range of 36-133mm with a maximum aperture range of f/2.8-5.8. If you're looking for a wider field of view, the 860 IS offers 28-105mm lens with the same maximum aperture range.
Coffee junkies should like the fact that the 960 IS includes optical image stabilisation to combat image blur from hand shake at slower shutter speeds. Face detection locates faces in the frame and sets exposure, focus and flash based on those so the camera won't accidentally focus on something in the background instead of your friends or family. Sensitivity ranges from ISO 80 through ISO 1,600. Though Canon does include an ISO 3,200 scene preset, it lowers the resolution to 2 megapixels.
You won't find manual exposure controls in the 960 IS, though we really think it'd behoove Canon to include them in at least one of their Digital IXUS models. Canon does include numerous options, including exposure compensation, flash compensation and choices for focus, metering, white balance, numerous scene modes and a number of flash options.
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