Canon PowerShot A800

Canon is not one cut corners with his cameras, but it has trimmed the A800 down on their absolute essential. Developed the plastic, bulbous body, make room for two AA batteries (with the battery sold separately), the lens is zoom affair with no optical stabilisation, the screen measures an easy 3.3 x only 2.5 of and has a low 115,000 pixels, and record with a basic VGA resolution.


The 10-megapixel resolution like Basic, but it a positive step is actually. It is more than enough for many details, capture, and the relatively low resolution helps to keep noise at Bay. In contrast to other 10-megapixel sensors of rival budget cameras is used, this has the same 1 / 2.3in diagonally as more expensive compact cameras, which makes a big difference for noise level.


Canon has not saved with the controls and photographic options that have the same design and proven effects which we seen many times before. There are a variety of measurement modes and the ability to define a custom white balance function that omit many more expensive cameras. The screen but was not much fun to use. With its small size and low resolution, but its weak colors and poor viewing angles made it difficult to recognize we could live sunlight.


Performance is more than we want scaled. Photos took more than two seconds after catching on the screen appear, and shot to shot 4.8 seconds was the main culprit in time. Flash photography was really slow at up to 14 seconds between shots - a common side effect with AA batteries.

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