Archive for June 12th, 2007

(mini) Canon SD850is review

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

canon sd850is first pix (1) - happy JTJust finished replacing my stolen hardware with the brand-spankin new Canon SD850is.  I had actually purchased the SD800is last week, but just before breaking the 15-day-return seal from Best Buy, I did a little homework to discover the 850 was showing up “mid-June”.  And with my typical “must-have-it-now” obsessive nature, I started calling CompUSA, Best Buy, Circuit City, and the local Wolf Camera every day until last night.

It’s a 8-megapixel point-and-shoot camera with 4x optical zoom, facial recognition, and image stabilization technologies.  In other words, it’s pretty much the top point-and-shoot camera on the market right now, and while I’m rarely one to get “the best”, I love the Canon SD line (ever since the SD100 I had, which was, also, stolen), and I figured I might as well pick up the latest & greatest since insurance is covering it anyway.  Not to mention the fact that it is the technical replacement for the SD700is I used to have (the SD800is is technically a separate line, as it features a wideangle lens instead).

canon sd850is first pix (2) - front viewSo far, the picture quality looks great, and like my old 700, it’s a very fast, very easy to use camera.  The speed in this case matters, as the total time from pushing power until taking a picture is under 2 seconds, and in continuous mode it seems to get up to about 4-5 shots per second.  Not like my first-gen Kodak digital camera, with 3+ seconds bootup plus a good second or two just to click and shoot. 

Eight megapixels is a grand amount for me, I can do all sorts of wonderful cropping and whatnot and still have printable photos.  Like the 700is, this unit also has 4x zoom, and again, I’m very impressed with the quality.  This is probably the point in the review where die-hard digital camera aficionados are rolling their eyes, so if that’s you, head on over to DPreview.com for a much more technical, in-depth overview.

canon sd850is first pix (6) - menu optionsAlso new to the 850 is a lot more options in the menus.  First up, the vestigial “Send-to-printer” button is now programmable – I set it to go straight into movie mode.  Next, there’s a lot of categorization, basic editing, and red-eye features built-into the unit – I haven’t tried them all out yet, but it seems like it’s fairly powerful, yet in Canon-style, not too complicated to use.

Last but not least is the continued inclusion of a viewfinder, which is really handy on very bright days.  I don’t mind sacrificing a little screen real estate for it.  I do really like the facial recognition technology.  If you haven’t seen it in action, it puts little white boxes around every face it “sees” and uses them for autofocus.  Very cool.  More of my pix are on flickr. So, to summarize:

canon sd850is first pix (6) - menu optionsPros

  • Lots of features AND…
  • Easy to use
  • 8 megapixels
  • 4x optical zoom
  • Fast shutter speed

Cons

  • Pricey
  • One of the larger point-and-shoot cameras

canon sd850is first pix (7) - 4xzoomIf you have $399 to shell out, I definitely recommend the SD850is.  If you want to save a little, pick up a 700 or 800 (although I’d avoid the 750, 900 or 1000 – terrible naming system) – you can still find them in plenty of spots (all links are to Amazon product pages).

Safari on Win… Yawn.

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

Seen Techmeme recently?  If not, it’s been Applerific for 48 hours now, and only barely about the iPhone!  Jobs announced Safari for Windows.  My favorite quote so far comes from a commentor (gasp):

i suspect it’ll be bundled with itunes by default, set itself as the default browser, set quicktime as the default media player, and set your homepage to the mac store with an imac already in your shopping basket.

One day later, it’s hackable.  Does that really surprise anyone?  My hunch is its equally hackable on OSX, but thats not quite as newsworthy, is it?

I’m sure there’s some big long uber-strategy here, but I don’t see it.  IE is not-so-great.  Firefox is fine. Opera is fine.  Do we need another browser?  Especially the oh-so-mediocre Safari. Is this a “foot-in-the-door” strategy? Sure doesn’t seem that way.

Where’s iPhoto for Windows?  Now THAT would be interesting, especially considering there’s no dominant photo app on the PC platform.

I’m 2 weeks into my Vista experience, and it’s clear to me that there’s plenty of opportunity for Apple to continue to outshine MS these days.  I’m not even close to making the leap personally, although my “right-click outage” (it stopped working until I rebooted) was pretty darn frustrating.  But bringing over the browser certainly doesn’t seem like the most obvious way in.