Canon PowerShot S110
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13 years ago
Canon PowerShot S110 First Impressions Review
Canon's PowerShot S-series was involved in a bit of a coup this year. More accurately, it was the victim of one. In 2011 and the early part of 2012, the S95 and later the S100 were the go-to recommendations for enthusiasts or pros looking for a fixed-lens, pocket-sized companion camera-and for...
Pros:
- Should perform a little better than the S100
- Improved autofocus system
Cons:
- Still won't compete with the RX100
- Missing ergonomic features
13 years ago
Canon S110 Review: The Best Camera You Can Fit In Your Pocket
The Canon S110 is the most refined little pocket camera Canon has ever made. The core design of the S110 remains unchanged from previous iterations. But with a little streamlining and some key new features, it's inched one step closer to perfection.
13 years ago
Still pointing and shooting
It seems like only a year ago we were telling you about the Canon Powershot S100 - wait, it WAS a year ago, almost to the day. So, in celebration of that anniversary, Gear Patrol, or rather Canon, brings you the next evolutionary step in point-and-shoot cameras, the Powershot S110 ($449) , scheduled...
13 years ago
Canon PowerShot S110 (2012)
Editor's Note: During 2001, Canon released the Canon PowerShot S110 Digital ELPH camera. The 2012 model of the Canon PowerShot S110 is the follow-up model to 2011's Canon PowerShot S100 and 2010's Canon PowerShot S95 .
13 years ago
Canon PowerShot S110
With the PowerShot S110, Canon revisits the excellent and easily-recommended S100, tweaking the design to allow wireless photo sharing. It's the fourth iteration of a series that has always performed admirably, offering enthusiast-friendly features in a pocket-friendly body.
Pros:
- Compact body easily slips in a pocket
- Customizable twin control dial interface
- Relatively fast lens at wide angle
- great for low-light shooting
- Good color and excellent hue accuracy
- Program
- priority
- and manual exposure modes
- Raw and Raw+JPEG file support
- Rich manual focus options including
Cons:
- High barrel distortion at wide angle
- Soft corners
- Very high chromatic aberration at wide angle in raw files
- Slight reduction in print quality
- Sluggish mode switching
- Autofocus speed still slower than average
- Burst mode is JPEG-only
- locks exposure variables
- Sedate continuous-shooting speed,
13 years ago
Canon PowerShot S110
The new Canon PowerShot S110 is outwardly very similar to the S100 model that it replaces, so a lot of the comments that we made in that review apply equally to the S110. It's is an understated yet handsome camera that looks a lot simpler than its extensive feature list might suggest.
11 years ago
So happy then so sad!!!!!
I loved this camera. I used all the features. I probably convinced others to buy this camera because of the way I promoted it and believed in it. I traveled with it to Italy, Peru, Puerto Rico and all over the USA and took beautiful photographs.
Pros:
- Bright LCD
- Easy to use
- Excellent Image Quality
- good low-light performance
- lightweight/portable
- Nice features/settings
- Simple controls/menu
Cons:
- Short life
13 years ago
High quality small digital camera
Camera is small enough to put in your pocket. Good quality pictures. The small flushed buttons are hard to press. You almost cannot feel the buttons, most of time I have to look at the buttons and use my fingernail to press it.
Pros:
- Small Footprint
Cons:
- Small Flushed Buttons
13 years ago
Canon PowerShot S110
The Canon PowerShot S110 ($449.99 direct) is the follow-up to last year's Editors' Choice Canon PowerShot S100 , a point-and-shoot that was, at the time, the best pocket camera on the market.
Cons:
- Expensive
- No GPS
- Lacks hot shoe or EVF option
- 1080p video limited to 24fps.
13 years ago
PowerShot S110 for the ambivalent snapshooter
Nice photo quality, improved autofocus performance, and a very compact design make the Canon PowerShot S110 a solid option if you're looking for something between a point-and-shoot and an enthusiast compact. But if you can find them cheaper, the S100 or S95 are still good alternatives.
Pros:
- The Canon PowerShot S110 has better autofocus than its predecessor while maintaining good-to-excellent photo quality
Cons:
- A not-very-impressive implementation of the new wireless connectivity features and still-sluggish image processing weigh down the camera
4.3
from 52 reviews
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