- Canon PowerShot SD790 IS. The Canon SD790 IS Digital ELPH features a. You might think the lack of a Manual mode would be another, but the Canon SD790 IS is.
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by Mike Pasini, Siegfried Weidelich, and Stephanie Boozer Review Posted: 09/05/08 The Canon PowerShot SD790 IS is smaller than a deck of playing cards, yet conveys a sophisticated and substantial look and feel, thanks to its solid, streamlined and modern digital camera design. The Canon SD790 IS Digital ELPH features a 10-megapixel 1/2.3-inch CCD imager and a Canon-branded 3x optical zoom lens with image stabilization, which covers a fairly standard range of 35-105mm equivalent -- a moderate wide angle to a moderate telephoto. Exposure is fully automatic, but you can tweak it with 2.0 EV of exposure compensation and four metering modes to handle difficult lighting, including a mode which ties metering to the camera's face detection system. Twelve scene modes keep the Canon SD790 approachable for beginners. A long-exposure mode in the Canon SD790 IS ELPH lets you set exposure times as long as 15 seconds manually, and a large 3.0-inch PureColor LCD II display helps when framing images, leaving no space for an optical viewfinder. The Canon SD790 derives its power from a proprietary NB-5L lithium-ion battery pack, and is rated at 330 shots per charge with the LCD on (CIPA method). Canon SD790 IS Pricing and Availability The Canon PowerShot SD790 IS Digital ELPH ships from late March 2008, and is expected to retail for about US$350. Be sure to check our shopping links for better prices. Canon SD790 IS User Report by Mike Pasini Intro. Canon offers so many digicams, it's hard (but possible) to distinguish one from another. The Canon SD790 IS is an attractive 10-megapixel ELPH with optical image stabilization and a DIGIC III processor. Its main drawback is that its optical zoom range extends only three times to 105mm. If you can live with that limitation, well, you won't find many others in this remarkable, if automatic, digicam. Closed. It's small enough to fit in a watertight Otter box. Look and Feel. Size has always been at the heart of the ELPH's allure and the SD790 IS maintains that advantage, adding a bit of charm with a symmetrically sculpted look that is attractive standing on-end or sideways. Even the back is attractive with its 230,000-pixel, 3-inch LCD and simple die-cut buttons above and below the rotating navigator dial. That new dial doubles as a sub-mode dial (if a bit awkwardly). The top two buttons are Print/Share and Playback. The bottom two are Display and Menu. The Control Dial uses the Up arrow for ISO, Right for Flash modes, Down for Trash/Shutter Release modes/Self-Timer, and Left for Focus modes. Look closely and you'll find the "thumb grip" of eight raised bumps between the top buttons and the LCD. Back. A big LCD and just a few controls. The 3-inch LCD is the only viewfinder on the Canon SD790 IS, but it's a high-resolution one with 230,000 pixels. And you can see it in direct sunlight without squinting. The rotating Control dial spins to select any of the various Auto mode options (including Auto, Camera M, Color Accent, Color Swap, Digital Macro, and Stitch Assist). Lens. Only 3x optical zoom. Interface. As it happened, I had the Canon SD790 IS for a couple of weeks, so it became my pocket camera. I found it easy enough to use that at certain events like dinner parties it was no trouble to hand it off to someone who had never seen one before and ask them to take my picture. All I had to show them -- no matter their age -- was where to find three buttons: the Power button, the Shutter button and the Zoom ring. The big screen made it easy to compose the shot and check the capture. Of course, there are buttons and a dial and they do offer useful functions, as we detailed above. But the beauty of this ELPH is that you rarely have to use them. Camera M. The most control with EV, White Balance, Metering, and more. Modes. An ELPH is an automatic camera. Slide the Mode switch to Auto and forget about it. If you see something strange on the LCD, try a Scene mode by sliding the Mode switch to the middle. But Auto does very well. If you've got some shooting experience, you'll probably prefer Camera M as your default shooting mode because Auto only lets you change file size and compression in the menu system. If you want to change EV or set the white balance or change the exposure metering (and who doesn't?), you want Camera M. To get to Camera M, set the Mode switch to Auto and spin the navigator. The screen will display the Auto options (which include some fun things like Color Accent, Color Swap, Digital Macro, and Stitch Assist). Shooting modes are surprisingly extensive. They include Auto, Camera M, Special Scene (Portrait, Foliage, Snow, Beach, Sunset, Fireworks, Aquarium, ISO 3200, Underwater, Indoor, Kids & Pets, Night Snapshot, Color Accent, Color Swap, Digital Macro, Stitch Assist, and Movie. You can use digital zoom in Movie mode and there's even a time-lapse option. Image Inspection Tool. Here the SD790 IS is showing us the focus point and letting us examine a magnified view of it. Storage and Battery. The Canon SD790 IS has an SD memory card slot, which can accommodate SD/SDHC memory cards, MultiMediaCard/MMC Plus cards, and HC MMC Plus cards. It does not have any internal memory storage. File sizes vary quite a bit, but my shots at the highest resolution with the least compression were typically about 4.6MB, although a few ran as high as 5.2MB. A nearly black image is about 2.2MB for comparison (yes, I had one of those). Slide Show Options. The bar second from the bottom lets you select various groups of images. The NB-5L lithium-ion battery never failed me, holding a charge through any of the events where I used the camera. CIPA testing standards (which tax the battery a good deal more than I do, using quite a few flash shots) rate the capacity at about 330 shots or 420 minutes of playback time. Performance. With Canon's fastest processor (the same one used in its digital SLRs), you'd expect the SD790 IS to score above average on our essential tests -- and it does indeed. Flash cycle time was only average at 6.7 seconds with a full-power discharge. While the flash is competent, reaching 11 feet at wide angle using only ISO 250 and 6.6 feet at telephoto using ISO 200, it isn't going to light up big rooms. The 3-inch LCD ranks above average, while 3x optical zoom is just average. This isn't the camera to take sightseeing. But few ELPHs really are. Weight was a trim 6.31 ounces, but that's a bit heavier than average. I have no complaint with that, however, since it helps stabilize the camera in your hand. In short, the Canon SD790 IS gets high marks for performance with the usual compact flash syndrome. Image Quality. Performance is important when you're using the camera, but what you are left with is image quality. How good are the SD790 IS images? Like other digicams in its class, barrel distortion at wide angle was high at 0.9 percent, but pincushion at telephoto was low at less than 0.1 percent. Chromatic aberration was high at wide angle, as well, exacerbated by corner blur. That sounds worse than it is. I can't think of a single compact digicam that doesn't suffer the same fate. While there is some oversaturation of reds and blues, color was generally vibrant and pleasing. That's saying something because in this class the tendency is to oversaturate, to make images "pop," to really dazzle you. Except if you walked around town being dazzled, you'd probably be run over by a bus. Natural color is something we all prize around here and the Canon comes very close to it. Our lab shots get to the meat of the matter. The ISO 100 Still Life does exhibit issues with corner blur (yarns are sharper at the bottom) and highlight bleeding (see the white napkin under the dark coffee cup or the top edge of the Samuel Smith label). But you can still distinguish the mosaic pattern on the Hellas vinegar bottle, and the proportional scale looks pretty good. The high resolution Multi Target shows the extent of the chromatic aberration we mentioned in the corners but also the very sharp resolution at the center of the image. The dolls are a good illustration of the value of the DIGIC III chip. I actually prefer the ISO 3,200 shot to the ISO 1,600 shot. The 1,600 shot is full resolution (2,736 x 3,648) while the 3,200 shot is smaller (1,200 x 1,600). But color is better at the smaller size. My fire hydrant torture test shows almost no highlight blooming from the white hydrant into the dark hedge. That is really pretty remarkable. Our lab's outdoor shot didn't do quite as well, however. Still, many more expensive digicams can't do as well. We also shot that at -2/3 EV after looking at the 0 EV shot in the LCD but on the computer the original 0 EV shot looks about right. So despite the typical ultracompact issues, I have no complaints about image quality. Would that every digicam did as well. Appraisal. The Canon SD790 IS has only one strike against it and that's its 3x optical zoom. You might think the lack of a Manual mode would be another, but the Canon SD790 IS is designed for taking great snapshots. With its DIGIC III processor, it does just that. Canon SD790 IS Basic Features 10 megapixel sensor with DIGIC III image processor 3x optical zoom lens (35-105mm 35mm equivalent) 3-inch LCD ISO sensitivity from 80 to 3,200 Shutter speeds from 15 to 1/1,500 Max Aperture: f/2.8 SDHC/SD memory card support Custom lithium-ion battery Canon SD790 IS Special Features Improved Face Detection Technology sets the focus, exposure, flash, and white balance automatically Motion Detection Technology detects subject movement and optimizes exposure control and ISO settings to reduce image blur DIGIC III Image Processor USB 2.0 Hi-Speed With a generous 10-megapixel sensor and a high-resolution, 3-inch LCD, the chiseled Canon SD790 IS ELPH is hard to ignore. Add Canon's Face Detection and Motion Detection technology, all handled by the company's premier DIGIC III image processor, and even what you don't see is impressive. Like all compact digicams it suffers from slightly noticeable corner softening and chromatic aberration at wide angle. But that's forgivable. We're less inclined to forgive the meager 3x zoom, particularly if you do a lot of landscape shooting. But when it comes to image quality, the Canon SD790 IS impressed me with its dynamic range and natural color capture. Small enough to take anywhere, you'll never want to be without it. The Canon SD790 is an easy Dave's Pick.
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