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Canon Powershot S100 Review


The Canon S100 is the successor to the highly popular S95 and continues the same tested and proven formula for a point-and-shoot digital camera — wide aperture and manual control in a solid, light and portable body.



The Canon S95 was a best-seller for its great image quality, HD video recording, an f2.0 aperture that’s good for low-lit conditions and a full manual mode very few other point-and-shoot cameras have.

The Canon S100 sets that up one notch, offering full HD 1080p video capture, higher optical zoom capabilities and GPS functionality.



When the Canon S100 was announced, it doesn’t seem to have any significant difference to the S95 so I was really curious to find if there’s something more to it beyond the exterior. Take note though that the sensor was changed from CCD to CMOS.

It’s got an almost similar body design and size (just a bit smaller and lighter). The smooth and matte finish is now a bit rougher although still matte but more like a sand-paper finish. There’s a thin strip of rubber up at the front to provide better grip. The dual microphones are now at the top corner, just above the Canon logo.

The familiar Canon controls are still there at the back although there were also some minor changes introduced like the dedicated video capture button and the repositioning of the Ring Function button which also serves as the delete button.



In Manual Mode, the ring can adjust the aperture (from f/2.0 to f/8.0) while the smaller dial at the back can adjust shutter speed (ranging from 15 secs to 1/2000) and ISO (80-6400). And since there’s built-in GPS, it can actively tag location of all photos taken by the S100. The camera’s ability to connect to GPS satellites even if in the off state can hasten battery drain though so you’ll need to adjust this function accordingly.

The camera is pretty fast — you’re ready to shoot in under 1.5 seconds from the off state, fairly fast and accurate focus and close to 3 frames per second of continuous shooting.



As expected, picture quality is impressive. Great photos even on low-light conditions with minimal noise or aberrations (mostly, at under ISO 800). Even at ISO 6400, the photos are decent. Colors are well saturated and spread evenly.

All the sample photos here are taken at JPEG 9M with an average file size of 2MB. You also have the option to shoot both RAW+JPEG at the same time.



Aside from Manual Mode, you’d almost set the camera to Auto but there’s the usual option for Av, Tv P, SCN and Creative Filter (same as the S95 like miniature, HDR, fisheye,and color swap).



Macro shots are equally good with a minimum focusing distance of just 3cm (or just over an inch away). The image stabilizer and anti-shake features also helps in getting a good close-up shot, whether in broad daylight or at night.



I loved the 720p HD videos on the S95 but the S100 also captures the same great videos at 1080p @ 24fps. The 720p resolution now captures up to 30fps while an option for slow-motion video can be done at 640×480 @ 120fps.

The dedicated video button is now separate from the shutter button which helps you easily figure out if you’re taking photos or videos, especially in those moments when you’re in a rush. The camera also actively focuses when you’re shooting videos so you’re never out-of-focus. What I was looking for was have manual focus when taking videos but it look slike I cannot do it here.



This 39-second HD video has a file size of 101.4MB. As long as you’re using a Class 6 or higher SD card (I use a SanDisk Extreme 30MB/s with this one), you’re good.



The pop-up flash is still useful when shooting in low-light to dark conditions but I only use it when it is absolutely necessary. For the most part, I’d adjust to a high ISO setting and lower the shutter speed to compensate for lack of ambient light.

Canon Powershot S100 specs: 12.1MP CMOS sensor 1/1.7″ sensor size f/2.0-5.9 Image Stabilizer Digic 5 processor ISO 80 – 6400 24–120 mm focal length 5x optical zoom 4x digital zoom 3″ LCD display f/2.0 – f/5.9 aperture 1/2,000 – 15s shutter speed Built-in flash 2.3fps continuous shoot 1080p video recording at 24fps SD/SDHC/SDXC RAW + JPEG file format HF-DC2 High-Power Flash (optional) Built-in GPS Li-Ion battery 1120mAh

There’s a Digital AV Out and an HDMI port so you can actually hook this up to an external display (HDTV) for direct playback.

What I found disappointing is the battery life. This is my same frustration with the S95 and Canon didn’t even improve the capacity of the NB-5L battery. Add to that disappointment is the new battery size — the one on the S95 would not fit the S100. I guess I have to buy a high-capacity battery for this one when I’m on a long trip (I remember seeing a 2400mAh or 3200mAh battery before for the S95 so I’m hoping there’s one for the S100 too).



After a couple of weeks with the Canon S100, I thought it didn’t really have much to offer if you’re already using the S95. It would be wise to stick with the S95 for now but if you can dispose it for a good price, then the S100 is the logical upgrade. If you don’t have a point-and-shoot camera, the S100 is a really good choice.

While the Canon S100 is not yet officially released in the Philippines, a number of online stores are already selling it for around Php21k and up. It’s available in silver and black but it looks like only the black varinat is widely distributed. I got my unit in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia last December for under Php19k. Yugatech.com