Ease of Use
The Canon Digital IXUS 70 is a very well-made
compact digital camera, with a stylish all-metal body and excellent overall
finish. It has a pleasingly simplistic, clean overall design, reminiscent of the
original IXUS designs. If you require a pocket camera that is both good-looking
and hard-wearing, then look no further. The Canon Digital IXUS 70 is easily
small enough to fit into the palm of your hand, weighing just 125g without the
battery or memory card fitted. It's also the slimmest Canon digital compact
ever, although at 19.4mm deep, I have seen much slimmer models from other
manufacturers. Most aspects of the design and build have a quality feel with
nothing really feeling flimsy or ill-thought out. There are a few minor
criticisms that can be leveled at the Canon Digital IXUS 70, mostly concerning
the various covers. The plastic Camera/Movie/Play switch on the rear of the
camera feels cheap and out of place. The plastic A/V Out / Digital port cover on
the side of the camera feels a little flimsy, as does the battery/memory card
compartment cover.
The Canon Digital IXUS 70 is comfortable to hold,
despite being such a small camera. Both thumbs naturally support the bottom of
the camera, whilst operating the shutter button with your right index finger.
You can also comfortably hold the camera and take pictures with one hand.
Despite the smooth all-metal body, the camera is not too slippy when gripping
it. The various buttons are well-made and easy to operate, and the camera feels
well-balanced in your hands. There are no real innovative features here, but
everything that the Canon Digital IXUS 70 does, it does extremely well. Overall
the Canon Digital IXUS 70 is well constructed and designed with no obvious signs
of corners being cut. Even the tripod mount, traditionally a last minute thought
on a camera like this, is (nearly) positioned in the center of the bottom of the
camera.
The Canon Digital IXUS 70 has relatively few
external controls, just 9 in total, reflecting the fact that this is strictly a
point and shoot camera in functionality terms. Cleverly you can directly access
the various flash, macro and timer options by clicking on the navigation pad,
and Canon have also dedicated the Up position to ISO speed, which is a commonly
used feature. There is also a sub-menu accessed via the Func/Set button in the
middle of the navigation pad, which allows you to set exposure compensation,
white balance, image effects, metering and image size/quality settings. This
system is a good compromise given the small size of the camera and therefore the
limited space for external controls. All 9 external controls are clearly labeled
using industry-standard symbols and terminology. Overall the camera body feels
very well-designed and not at all cluttered, despite the presence of the large
2.5 inch LCD screen. A small optical viewfinder is also included, which is
welcome for moments when it is difficult to use the LCD screen i.e. in very
bright sunlight. I found it to be a little on the small side, however, so you
will probably find yourself using the LCD screen most of the time.
The Manual mode setting on the Canon Digital IXUS
70 may make you think that this camera offers full photographic control, but
sadly it doesn't. Manual mode is just Canon's way of giving you access to more
"advanced" features, like setting the ISO speed and White Balance. The Canon
Digital IXUS 70 is purely a point and shoot camera with absolutely no control
over aperture or shutter speed. It does, however, have some features that you
won't find on other digital cameras. Press the Function button and select the My
Colors option to reveal the Custom Color menu, which includes a number of
pre-set looks, such as Positive Film and Vivid Green. These are a quick way of
achieving a particular effect. More exciting are the Color Accent and Color Swap
options in the shooting mode menu. Color Accent allows you to select one colour
and render the rest of the image in black and white, whilst Color Swap lets you
select a colour in the image and change it for another completely different one.
As far as I know, Canon are the only manufacturer to offer what is quite an
advanced feature directly in their cameras.
Face Detection is a new feature that's rather
buried away. You have to press the dedicated Menu button and then choose face
detection from the AiAF mode options. Rival compact cameras have a dedicated
button for this feature, so it's a curious decision by Canon to bury it away
within the menu system. The new face detection feature won't make a great deal
of difference for the more experienced photographer, as there's the tendency for
the user to pre-focus on the subject – and obviously a face if taking a portrait
– before fully pressing the shutter button anyway. It will prove more useful for
the novice point and shoot user though. I didn't notice any notable difference
between the AiAF On and AiAF Face Detection settings in terms of speed, so I
just set the camera to the latter.
The new ISO Auto Shift function is more useful,
providing a quick way to boost the ISO speed when the camera is struggling to
provide a fast enough shutter speed for the prevalent lighting conditions. Turn
this feature on, and when the IXUS 70 displays the red camera shake icon on the
LCD screen, the round Print/Transfer button on the rear of the camera flashes
blue. Press this whilst half-pressing the shutter button, and the camera sets a
much faster ISO speed (typically ISO 800), which is usually enough to allow you
take the shot and avoid camera shake. Quite a clever and quick way to access a
more usable ISO speed. There are some notable limitations though, principally
the inability to use it with flash. As an aside, you can also assign your
favourite camera setting to the Print/Transfer button, with Exposure
Compensation being a good choice.
The menu system on the Canon Digital IXUS 70 is
extremely straight-forward to use and is accessed by a dedicated button
underneath the navigation pad. Quite a lot of the camera's main settings, such
as white balance, exposure compensation and ISO speed, are accessed elsewhere,
so the main menu system isn't actually too complicated. A row of 3 icons along
the top of the LCD screen represents the various sub-menus, with most of them
being the kind that you set once and then forget about. Due to the very large
and bright LCD screen, the various options are easy to access and use,
especially as only 6 are shown onscreen at one time. If you have never used a
digital camera before, or you're upgrading from a more basic model, reading the
comprehensive and fairly easy-to-follow manual before you start is a good idea.
Unfortunately Canon have chosen to cut costs and only supply it as a PDF on a
CD, rather than in printed format. Not much use if you're taking pictures and
need to find out what a particular option does.
The start-up time from turning the Canon Digital
IXUS 70 on to being ready to take a photo is very quick at around 1/2 second,
and it takes about 2 seconds to zoom from the widest focal length to the
longest, and back again. Focusing is very quick in good light and the camera
happily achieves focus indoors or in low-light situations, helped by a powerful
focus-assist lamp. The visibility and refresh rate of the 2.5 inch LCD screen
are perfectly acceptable, and the resolution is very good too. It takes about 1
second to store an image, allowing you to keep shooting as they are being
recorded onto the memory card - there is no LCD blackout between each image. In
Continuous mode the camera takes 1.7 frames per second at the highest image
quality, which is a about average for this class of camera, but best of all this
shooting rate is maintained until your memory card is full. All in all the Canon
Digital IXUS 70 is quite fast in terms of operational speed.
Once you have captured a photo, the Canon Digital
IXUS 70 has an excellent range of options when it comes to playing, reviewing
and managing your images. You can instantly scroll through the images that you
have taken, view thumbnails, zoom in and out up to 10x magnification, view
slideshows with lots of different user settings, delete, protect, and rotate an
image. You can also add a sound clip to an image, set the print order and the
transfer order. There's a new red-eye correction option, and you can apply any
of the 10 different My Colors options to a photo after you have taken it. My
Category allows you to sort your images into various preset categories, with 3
custom categories available. The Display button toggles detailed settings
information about each picture on and off, such as the ISO rating and white
balance, and there is a small histogram available during playback which is
helpful in evaluating the exposure.
In summary the Canon Digital IXUS 70 is a stylish,
very compact, well-built point and shoot digital camera with no notable
flaws.