Price range: £17.32
What is it: 8-megapixel superzoom with 10x zoom lens
What we think: First-rate photo quality, but performance issues earn it ratings demerits
Canon PowerShot SX100 IS Review
Reviewed on: 2 November 2007
Image quality
What the camera sacrifices in speed,
however, it makes up for in photo quality. Perhaps it's just the result
of an extra few months of tweaking since the S5 shipped, but the
SX100's photo quality, especially at higher ISO sensitivity settings,
clearly improves upon its siblings.
At ISO 800, for example, there's far less of a mottled look in the SX100's shots, but with no increased loss of detail. The new lens has better distortion characteristics -- less distortion and more symmetry -- and photos look sharp without looking oversharpened.
While there's a bit of magenta, yellow and purple fringing, it's not nearly as severe in the SX100's photos as those of the S5 (or S3). Plus, the good aspects of those models' images -- predominantly excellent exposure and colour -- highlight the SX100's photos, as well.
Conclusion
Despite its arguably best-in-class photo
quality, the Canon PowerShot SX100's spotty performance, disappointing
movie capture and occasionally frustrating design keep it from earning
a no-brainer recommendation.
Additional editing by Shannon Doubleday
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