


Great design is just part of the PowerShot SD1000 Digital Elph story. Inside is all the power you need to capture the moments of your life — beautifully. The 7.1-megapixel CCD records a wealth of detail — enough to let you enlarge and crop at will. Images are rich and sharp with lifelike depth. The camera’s Genuine Canon 3x optical zoom not only gets you in close, but performs with all the clarity and brilliance you’d expect from the world’s leader in advanced optics technology.
Features at a glance:
Review By dpreview
Canon’s DIGIC III processor introduces several advancements that reduce the risk of blurred or poorly exposed photographs. Face Detection AF/AE/FE automatically detects up to nine faces within a scene and optimises focus and exposure accordingly. Fast and highly accurate, the system has been enhanced on these models to control flash exposure (FE), and is now capable of detecting faces at greater distances. Face Detection Technology also enables Red-Eye Correction in playback. Users can quickly detect and remove red-eye in captured images directly in-camera, ensuring that people shots look natural and accurate.
Review By Amazon
Vivid, high-resolution 2.5-inch PureColor LCD The camera’s 2.5-inch LCD screen gives you the big picture, whether you’re shooting, reviewing or showing off your images. This extra-durable, high-resolution screen with tough scratch-resistant coating on the anti-reflective, PureColor LCD offers a crisp, clear picture to make shooting, playback and using the camera’s menu functions especially convenient. Clear and bright, it also features Night Display for easy viewing in low light.
Review By Reviews.cnet.
mage quality from the PowerShot SD1000 was excellent in our tests, with accurate colors and plenty of sharpness. The camera’s automatic white balance yielded slightly yellowish images with our test lab’s Tungsten lights, though the Tungsten white balance preset compensated, producing very neutral colors. Canon keeps noise well under control from ISO 80 through ISO 200, though the company’s noise reduction algorithms seem to pull out a minute amount of sharpness at ISO 200. At ISO 400 noise becomes more apparent, manifesting as a light covering of mostly bluish, off-color speckles.













March 22nd, 2007 at 10:21 am
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