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Canon Digital Ixus 110 IS

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By Joshua Goldman


The Canon Digital Ixus 110 IS is a followup to the very popular Ixus 870 IS featuring the same 28mm wide-angle lens with a 4x optical zoom. But this model jumps from 10 to 12 megapixels, adds 720p HD video recording and utilizes the improved Canon's Digic 4 image processor. It also features an HDMI output so you can quickly hook the camera up to an HDTV for playing back photos and videos. That, unfortunately, is one of the few good things about the design, with the main issue being its widescreen LCD. On the upside--and probably most importantly--it takes very good photos with great color and exposure. The HD video quality is good, too.

Editors' note:

This review is based on tests done by our sister site CNET.com. As such, please note that there may be slight differences in the testing procedure and ratings system. For more information on the actual tests conducted on the product, please inquire directly at the site where the article was originally published. References made to some other products in this review may not be available or applicable in Asia.

Design And Features

Typical of the Ixus series, the 110 IS is small, reasonably good-looking, and available in different colors--silver, gold, blue, and pink. Canon employed a 2.8-inch widescreen LCD, which is weird unless you plan on taking photos for viewing on a widescreen computer monitor, TV, or digital photo frame. If you are, it would appear you're overpaying for the 12-megapixel resolution of this camera since shooting in widescreen format drops the resolution to 4,000 x 2,248 pixels from 4,000 x 3,000 pixels. Should you snap pictures at the 110 IS' top resolution of 12 megapixels, you'll be using only 2.3 inches of screen. Suddenly that 2.8-inch widescreen LCD just got a lot less attractive.

If the back of the shooter looks peculiar, it's because Canon axed two buttons--Print/Share and Display--and has also eliminated a lot of labeling. This is both good and bad. The Print/Share is usually user programmable, so even if you don't use it for its intended purpose you can still make use of the button. The Display key is gone, and has been moved to the unlabeled rotating disc/directional pad. You have to rotate or press the disc for a graphic to appear onscreen with labels for what for the navigation pad does, such as timer, display information, focusing range and flash.

Specification/Model Ixus 110 IS Ixus 870 IS
Sensor resolution 12 megapixels 10 megapixels
Dimension/Weight 97.9 x 54.1 x 22.1mm/145g 93.8 x 56.8 x 23.6mm/155g
LCD size 2.8-inch 3-inch
Lens/Focal length 4x optical zoom/28mm to 112mm 4x optical zoom/28mm to 112mm
Max. video resolution 1,280 x 720 pixels 640 x 480 pixels
Image stabilizer Optical Optical
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Making room for the Display function on the navigation pad was done by relegating the exposure compensation feature to the Function menu. It may look like a more straightforward design, but you're sacrificing features for it. Again, this can be both good and bad depending on your needs and expectations.

The 110 IS is limited to three shooting modes, none of which allows you to tweak shutter speed or aperture (remember, this is pretty much a simple point-and-shoot). A small switch on top toggles between Canon's Smart Auto mode, a Program/Scene mode option and Movie mode. The Smart Auto picks from 18 scenes, so the bases are well covered. In Program you can control things such as ISO, white balance, light metering, and autofocus type, or you can switch to a handful of scene options like Portrait and Indoors and Specialty Scene selections including Aquarium, Under Water (for use with an optional enclosure), and ISO 3200, which resulted in photos that weren't usable for much more than posting them online.



Tags: Resolution, TV, disc, Pixel, computer monitor