As you have observed, screens can be very hard to see in bright outdoor light. Because of this, many prefer cameras that also have viewfinders which are unfortunately becoming scarce on P&S cameras.I picked up a waterproof Fuji Finepix - which has decent specs and is waterproof (great for backpacking in wet weather) and discovered once on the trail that there was something I hadn't considered: there was a nice display/view screen on the back of the camera which was great in the store, but outdoors the light reflecting off the screen made it almost impossible to see the picture I was getting without putting an extra shirt or something over my head to block the light. The pictures are all fine, but I had little control over the framing alignment.
Which model? I ask because I ended up with the DMC-FZ28 (now replaced by the FZ35) which has two features I felt I needed: a powerful (×18) zoom and a viewfinder. I had originally been planning to use it in point and shoot mode, but have started reading about the many control options (David Pogue's Digital Photography: The Missing Manual) and am actually using some already!... but ended up going with a Panasonic Lumix DMC series based on its much-greater optical zoom range and high quality Zeiss lens.
Canon's making great cameras these days; good features, good prices, good quality, stuff comes out fairly well on full automatic mode.
Yep--I'm still happy with it. It was a replacement for a dead A75. I use it mostly as a carry-around-town camera. (I've got a Canon SD800 for hiking--it is small and light and the lens goes down to 28mm eFL and I have a DSLR in case I want to pull out a bigger gun.) All of my cameras have viewfinders--I wouldn't consider one without.Doug Paul, you got the Canon A590 IS cheap as per that thread. Are you still liking it ? Sounds like a great 2nd or 3rd camera.
I'm kind of partial to the Imaging Resource reviews: http://www.imaging-resource.com/PRODS/A590IS/A590ISA.HTM.
Optical viewfinders are getting scarcer, but you can still get them from Canon in their G*, SD*, and A* lines: http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/controller?act=ProductCatIndexAct&fcategoryid=113I like Canon but their new P&S cameras don't have an optical viewfinder or full manual controls. It's very hard to get a good sunset shot without full manual.
OK, I thought they did, but I didn't check. Bummer.The newest Canon A series cameras, A1000, A1100, A2000, and A2100 do NOT have the full manual option.
And only the A1000 and A1100 have an optical viewfinder. The A1000 and A2000 are discontinued by now. The SD1200 and SD780 still have OVF as well but not the rest of the current SD-series. Even Canon appears to be dropping optical view finders from their smaller cameras. The larger zooms all have electronic view finders, mainly because of the size.The newest Canon A series cameras, A1000, A1100, A2000, and A2100 do NOT have the full manual option.
Image stabilization (Canon)/vibration reduction (Nikon) is definitely worth having.I have a Canon SD1000 which I like alot except that it doesn't have image stablization. I just got the replacement to the A590, the A1100, which does. It also uses AA batteries. So far, I like it alot.
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