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Canon’s PowerShot G9; It Takes More Than Megapixels To Make A “Serious” Point-And-Shoot Camera:
While neither the footage nor inch scale is densely calibrated (e.g., the footage scale has numbers for 2, 5, 10 ft and infinity), the position of the top of the bar indicator will give you a reasonable idea of your set focusing distance. You can also focus with greater precision by zooming out to a telephoto setting, focusing visually on the details in the rectangle, then zooming back to compose and take the shot—the camera will hold your manual focus setting. Our verdict on the G9’s manual focusing system: It’s convenient, useful, and unique, but no match for a D-SLR when it comes to focusing manually. My Modes, My Colors
In terms of overall picture-taking performance the Canon PowerShot G9 is outstanding.
The Optical Image Stabilizer (OIS) system certainly did a fine job in minimizing
the effects of shake in images we shot at maximum telephoto position (ISO 1600,
1/30 sec to 160 seconds at 210mm equivalent) in relatively low light. Details
are rendered with the outstanding clarity and contrast one would expect from
a high-end D-SLR, and colors, while on the saturated side typical of Canon cameras,
looked very natural. We were personally very pleased with skin tones shot under
natural light and with the built-in flash, but lowering the saturation a tad
would be a simple matter of going into the Custom area of My Colors where there
are tools for adjusting saturation, sharpness, and contrast. The raw and Large
Fine JPEG files turned out by the G9 are extraordinarily clean and free of noise—even
those shot at ISO 800. Only at the ISO 1600 and 3200 settings was there any
obvious lowering of image quality—and even at ISO 1600 it was surprisingly
moderate. Evidently Canon’s latest Digic III image processor is one of
the key factors in enhancing the camera’s imaging performance as well
as providing commendably quick AF and shutter response times. Technical Specifications
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