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Canon Digital IXUS 400

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List price as of Apr 28, 2003:
S$899

Product Summary


Excellent

8

out of 10

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The good: Well designed; very good image quality; solid performance; excellent red-eye reduction.

The bad: Few manual controls; no 640x480 movie mode.

The bottom line: The IXUS 400 offers great image quality and performance in an ultracompact package. Don't look for manual controls, though.

Read full review of the Canon Digital IXUS 400 »

 

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CNET Asia Review

By Denny Atkin

Canon's Digital IXUS 400 melds the ultracompact, cigarette-pack-sized design of the IXUS v3 with the higher-power 3X optical zoom--36mm to 108mm, in 35mm-camera terms--found on the IXUS 400's bulkier predecessor, the IXUS 330. Toss in an increase to 4-megapixel resolution, Canon's DIGIC image processor, an extended movie mode with sound, and the best red-eye reduction we've seen on a compact model, and you have an appealing camera in an equally attractive package. Though it lacks many of the manual settings and other advanced features of Canon's larger cameras and some competing ultracompacts, this Digital IXUS's excellent image quality and convenient size suit it for a broad variety of snapshooters.

Design
As ever, we appreciate the design of the Digital IXUS series, with its small body and intelligently laid-out menus and controls. Canon has managed to shave a couple of grams (ounces) from the IXUS 330's battery-and-media-equipped body, allowing the 226g (8-ounce) IXUS 400 to qualify as an ultracompact like the v3. And it does so with only one slight change: The mode dial--though a bit small and hard to turn--moves from the top of the camera to the back. The IXUS 400 also uses a stainless-steel body with a new Cerabrite finish that Canon claims will reduce the possibility of scratches.

The mode dial, the four menu buttons, and the four-way navigation pad put the most frequently used functions within reach of a button press or two. When you do need to get to the menus to access functions such as exposure compensation, you'll find the single-level menus easy to understand and navigate. If you turn off the camera or spend more than a few seconds in playback mode, the lens retracts, and its automatic cover engages, protecting it from scratches and fingerprints. The LCD remains unprotected, however, so be sure not to toss the IXUS 400 in your pocket with your keys.

Features
The IXUS 400's feature set squarely targets the point-and-shoot crowd, but surprisingly, it lacks the sophisticated scene modes that have become so popular in this class of camera. It supplies four shooting modes: Auto, Manual, Stitch Assist (for creating panoramas using multiple photos), and Movie. With the camera in Manual mode, you can adjust exposure compensation, white balance, ISO speed settings (50 to 400), and effects (vivid or neutral color, low sharpening, sepia, and black and white). You can also choose among three metering modes and two continuous-shooting modes. There's no manual focus, however; you get only an automatic nine-point AiAF, which automatically selects a focal point, and standard center-point focus.

Experienced photographers will find the lack of shutter- and aperture-priority settings frustrating at times--you can choose only a long-shutter-speed mode. In fact, the camera's inability to display exposure information for a scene caused us immense annoyance. Additionally, a quick-review option is absent. Less bothersome, it can't save raw or uncompressed TIFF files, only JPEGs. But we saw no serious compression artifacts at the highest resolution with JPEG quality set to its maximum level of SuperFine.

This camera falls behind the curve for movie capture, though. Although the IXUS 400 has an internal speaker that the v3 lacks, it unfortunately omits the v3's--and much of its newest competitors'--ability to capture video at 640x480 resolution. Instead, the IXUS 400 can record three-minute clips of 320x240-resolution Motion JPEG AVI video, at 15 frames per second (fps) with sound. You can also add voice annotations of up to 60 seconds to still images.

To complement its composite-video output, the IXUS 400 features an automated slide-show mode that lets you use the Print Order feature to select and rearrange photos for display in the show. And as with most Canon cameras, you can print directly to compatible Canon printers.

Performance
The IXUS 400 performs very well for a 4-megapixel model. It powers up and extends its lens in slightly less than three seconds, and Canon's DIGIC processor delivers responsive performance for most operations. The nine-point autofocus does a great job of properly focusing even when the primary subject is off-center or under low light. Shutter lag is perceptible but minimal in standard shooting modes, and shot-to-shot time runs a moderate four to five seconds. You can capture up to 2.5 shots per second in high-speed burst mode; we managed 50 sequential shots with no slowing in this mode. Even after cranking up the file size to its maximum, we still managed 14 sequential shots before the camera began to slow. However, at that size, the capture rate came closer to 0.7 fps.

The 1.5-inch LCD provides 100 percent coverage of your shot, and it remains sharp and vibrant even in bright outdoor lighting. As is typical for this class of camera, the optical viewfinder shows about 85 percent of the total image; atypically, it displays very little distortion.

The IXUS 400's enhanced red-eye reduction works dramatically better than in earlier Digital IXUS models. Because of the proximity of the lens to the flash, pocket cameras are very prone to causing red-eye in living subjects; we found red-eye in most v3 and IXUS 330 flash shots. In comparison, the IXUS 400 had red-eye in a very small percentage of shots; it even worked in photos of infants, who are among the most susceptible of subjects.

Image Quality
In typical use, the IXUS 400 produces very good images, with few sacrifices in quality relative to larger consumer cameras. Canon's DIGIC image processor and iSAPS scene-recognition technology impressed us, delivering a higher-than-average percentage of shots with proper exposure and accurate white balance. Its images look much sharper than average, on a par with its sibling the PowerShot S45, and our tests shots had excellent detail in the midtones, with no obvious clipping in the highlights or shadows (thanks to a post-processing induced compressed dynamic range). As with most Canon cameras, the automatic white balance produces an overly orange cast under tungsten lights, but the tungsten white-balance preset and manual correction handled tungsten-lit scenes very well. Furthermore, the camera's metering system and flash ably handled our side-lit test scene, delivering even illumination without blowing out the lighted area.

Shots taken at the ISO 50 and ISO 100 settings display relatively little noise compared with those from competitors, subtle enough that you really notice it in only solid-color patches. Unsurprisingly, images captured at the faster ISO 400 speed show much more noise. We also spotted some minor barrel distortion at the IXUS 400's widest angle of view, as well as some pincushioning at maximum zoom, but it's nothing you're likely to notice if you don't make a hobby out of photographing graph paper. We did see some chromatic aberration--purple fringing, that is--in typical problem areas, such as along the edges of exceedingly bright highlights. This shouldn't be a significant problem unless you plan to crop in close on those spots.

The IXUS 400's movies look surprisingly good when shot outdoors or in bright indoor lighting. But because the flash isn't active in movie mode, clips shot in dim light end up muddy and pixelated.

 

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User Reviews

It's one of the early IXUS series by Canon, it's quite advanced back in its time



Rating: 5 out of 10 (Average)
Pros: Enough functions,even it has some limitations
Cons: Quite bulk, easy to overheat after a series of shoots, pic gets blur if u put on auto mode
Opinion:
fair one I guess, considering it is one of the early IXUS,lot's of improvement product already came out since after.
Mine is broken now, due to age? or quality?

 

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