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The camera's body is half-again as long as one of Canon's more-diminutive Digital Elphs, measuring 4.5 inches across. In practice, the S70 is short enough to feel compact and fit in most pants pockets but also long enough to make two-handed shooting a comfortable endeavor. Those used to ultraslim or very compact point-and-shoots will likely find the S70 a bit clunky, and one-handed shooting is all but impossible without a tripod. The 1.8-inch LCD screen stays bright and fairly readable even in direct sunlight, but it's a bit small compared to the 2-inch displays that are becoming more popular in this market segment. Plus, as with most compact cameras, the S70's optical viewfinder is a diminutive and distorted alternative.
Canon logically lays out the buttons and controls on the PowerShot S70's rear. The menu button, the zoom control, the review toggle, the mode dial, and the four-way selector all lay within the arc of your right thumb, and the flash selector and the function/focus buttons are all easily reached by your left thumb. That's a lot of controls, but Canon intelligently allocates the division of labor between both thumbs: The left can bring up manual focus while the right clicks into shutter-priority mode, and tweaks both the focus and the shutter speed. Unfortunately, red-eye and flash-sync settings are buried in the main menu; they should be accessible from the flash button on the back of the camera.
The PowerShot S70's 3.6X optical-zoom lens protrudes from the front of the camera by a bit more than an inch, regardless of whether you're at a wide-angle or a telephoto setting. As a result, you can seek out a comfortable grip without the danger of accidentally getting a finger in front of the lens. The same can't be said of the flash, so if you're lining up a shot where lighting is of particular importance, you'll want to be careful, as the hand position that feels most natural on the camera brings the edge of your finger close to the corner of the flash.
The S70 also offers flexible focus options. You can manually select a focus area from anywhere within the center two-thirds of the scene, fix it at the center, or let the camera automatically select it for you with its nine-point AiAF system. Additionally, you can effectively combine them with the camera's Focus Bracketing feature. White-balance options consist of seven presets--including Underwater (for when the camera's submerged in its optional underwater housing), auto, and manual.
In addition to support for raw files, you can mix and match five resolution settings with three JPEG compression levels. Canon also includes software that allows you to shoot with the camera tethered to a PC.
But if you want to shoot movie clips, look elsewhere. The S70 is limited to 30 seconds of 10fps, VGA-resolution capture with mono sound, which is disappointing in a camera of its class and price range.
Given its small LCD and limited zoom range--a digital camera's display and zoom generally consume the most power--you'd think that the S70 would have exemplary battery life. Not so. Its 720mAh lithium-ion battery barely eked out 226 shots and one movie clip before dying. A second test finessed that up to 262 shots but with only 38 percent of those using the flash (we usually aim for 50 percent). That may sound like a lot, but you'll probably get worse battery performance in real-world usage, and a camera in its class should be able to sustain power for at least 500 shots.
The zoom operates a bit slowly and frequently overshoots a bit before snapping into one of its predefined increments. It's also fairly noisy. Once you have your scene framed, however, it focuses relatively quickly. There's a bit of barrel distortion at the widest-angle zoom but no more than we've seen with other cameras. As with other cameras, when using manual focus, a magnified view of the subject appears on the LCD. However, it's very difficult to judge focus on the small but otherwise bright and sharp display. At least the display reveals almost 100 percent of the scene; the optical viewfinder shows only 80 percent.

Unlike its sibling, the S60, which uses the same lens but a different sensor, the S70 exhibited minimal purple fringing. However, the lens's sharpness falls off toward the left side of the scene, which means that high-contrast edges in the upper-left corner become a potential trouble spot for fringing.
With manual white balance, the S70 produces very neutral grays. And using the tungsten white-balance preset in our test scene yielded fairly neutral, if slightly cool, results. The auto white balance works fairly well in natural light, but as usual with Canon cameras, the S70 delivered very orange images under tungsten lights.
Product Specifications:
Product Description:
Canon PowerShot S70 - Digital camera
Product Type:
Digital camera
Dimensions (WxDxH):
4.5 in x 1.5 in x 2.2 in
Color:
Black
Flash Memory:
32 MB
Supported Flash Memory:
Microdrive
,
CompactFlash
Analog Video Format:
NTSC
,
PAL
Sensor Resolution:
7.1 megapixels
Shooting Modes:
Frame movie mode
Focus Adjustment:
Manual
,
Automatic
Min Focus Range:
17.3 in
Focal Length:
5.8 mm - 20.7 mm
Red Eye Reduction:
Yes
Microphone:
Microphone - Built-in - Electret condenser
Viewfinder:
Optical - Black & white - Real-image zoom
,
- Color
Display:
LCD display - TFT active matrix - 1.8 in - Color
Supported Battery:
1 x Li-ion rechargeable battery - 720 mAh ( Included )
Product Basic Spec:
Video input type:
Digital camera
Digital Zoom:
4.1 x
Sensor resolution:
7.1 megapixels
Optical sensor size:
1/1.8 in
Optical sensor type:
CCD
Light sensitivity:
ISO 50
,
ISO 100
,
ISO 200
,
ISO 400
Gross sensor resolution:
7,400,000 pixels
Still image format:
RAW
,
JPEG
Lens Aperture:
F/2.8-5.3
Interchangeable lens:
No
Optical Zoom:
3.6 x
Camera Flash:
Built-in flash
Exposure metering:
Spot
,
Evaluative
,
Spot AF area
,
Center-weighted
Exposure compensation:
±2 EV range, in 1/3 EV steps
Flash memory:
32 MB - CompactFlash Card
Display type:
1.8 in LCD display
Battery type:
1 x Camera battery - Rechargeable - Lithium ion
Battery type(s) supported:
Lithium ion
Weight:
0.4 lbs
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