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im thinking to buy a canon camera but cant decide between these camers
Could u help me with the best one and WHY?

2007-02-26 17:03:03 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Cameras

4 answers

They are both excellent choices - for what they do best. Both Driveshaft and Henry are correct and it just depends on what you are looking for. The A640 has a sensor about twice as big as the A710IS, but the A710IS zooms out 50% further to 210 mm (equiv). The A640 takes 4 batteries instead of 2 and has about the longest battery life of any point and shoot camera out there. The A640 is 10 MP instead of 7 MP, so you can create some "zoom" by cropping the bigger image. The flip out and twist monitor of the A640 is pretty handy for some odd-angle shots.

Personally, I think I'd favor the A640.

Check out this comparison page. Click on "In-depth review" and "Read Owner Opinions" for each camera. Be sure to note that the reviews are many pages long so you don't stop after page one. Check the sample images, also. You can enlarge these to full size images if you click on the link below the picture. You will have to then put your cursor in the white space to the right of the picture and click once. After that, you can pass your cursor over the image and it will turn into a magnifier. Click it as a magnifier once and the image will go to full size and you can really examine the detail or look for artifacts like fringing or noise.

http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/compare_post.asp?method=sidebyside&cameras=canon_a710is%2Ccanon_a640&show=all

2007-02-26 23:12:56 · answer #1 · answered by Picture Taker 7 · 0 0

That's a question I think alot of people are wondering. Personally, I think the A640 is the best between the two. But that says just as much about my personal interests as it does about the cameras.

For starters, the A640 has the advantage of the larger 1/1.8" sensor. That's something very few people consider. With smaller sensors, you either end up with fewer pixels, or over-crowded pixels, which increases noise in your picture, and reduces dynamic range. A larger sensor also has some drawbacks, like a larger lens assembly, but the gains outway the costs for me.

Also, with teh A640, you get the vari-angle lcd, which helps you compose shots. I think the benefits of the vari-angle lcd are pretty obvious. The drawback might not be so obvious--simply that it adds thickness to the camera, and it is another area where the camera may break. But again, imho, I feel most people would say the gains outway the costs.

The A710 uses two AA batteries instead of the A640's 4 batteries, which gives it a smaller grip, and is a big reason why the A710 is smaller than the A640. But as the trade off you have slow flash recharge happens every time you use the flash. Speaking of flashes, the A640's flash is slightly more powerful, but probably not to a degree that you'd notice. It does allow you to use a slave flash too, but again, you'd probably never use that option.

Everyone has their own priorities and opinions. Mine tends to lean me towards the A640, even though it doesn't have as much zoom. Personally, I'd be even more attracted to the A640 if it had kept the same sensor size, but had put in higher-sensitivity photoreceptors, like the Fuji F30 does. If it had 7mp of Fuji's SuperCCD sensors, it would be a hard camera to beat.

2007-02-26 17:11:01 · answer #2 · answered by Driveshaft 3 · 0 0

If you don't need external flash, the stabilization of PowerShot A710 IS helps a lot with hand held and at low light condition.

2007-02-26 17:33:33 · answer #3 · answered by Henry 4 · 0 0

The Canon PowerShot SD1400IS is exactly one among those digicam I absolutely were desiring. I image files a lot, so i'm very in touch with the quantity of element which will be captured, extraordinarily in truly low-ordinary situations. the commonly used of the photos is seriously extra appropriate than the different digicam I absolutely have tried. pros: -Produces continuously sparkling photos -particularly compact, light-weight, and sturdy -ordinary to apply (purposes are intuitively prepared) -makes use of commonly used USB cable as a replace of a proprietary one (SONY) -makes use of commonly used memory as a replace of a proprietary one (SONY) -No wheels or toggle switches jutting out to get stuck on issues and reduce to rubble the settings (at the same time as i wanted to take wide-spread photos, I continually appeared to be capturing video clips, or photographing in a unusual ordinary putting with my SONY digicam) CONS: -Buttons look truly a lot less good than previous CANON fashions (my CANON IXY from about 8 years in the past became designed a lot extra appropriate) -Buttons are flush with the body of the digicam, so I absolutely ought to operate it utilizing my fingernails from time to time (lower back, the buttons on my CANON IXY were a lot a lot less complicated to apply) -The door to the digital port for connecting the USB cable would not swing out very wide, and that i have a feeling that if i'm no longer careful it ought to no longer very last lengthy (the CANON IXY had a mushy rubber cover that turned right into a lot extra versatile) in short, it really is a fine looking product, yet i wish that CANON will re-introduce a number of their older layout effective aspects interior the hot cameras with the intention to cause them to a touch sturdier and a lot less complicated to apply. I absolutely have not observed any problems with useless pixels--the liquid crystal show show is perfect. Please observe that you're going to favor to purchase a memory card one after the other. It does no longer comprise one.

2016-12-05 00:26:23 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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