Difference between revisions of "Canon PowerShot G12"

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By this point in time, Canon realized that even devoted [[DSLR]] owners sometimes sought the convenience of a pocketable camera. Accordingly, they had introduced the smaller (and RAW-capable) [[Canon PowerShot S90|PowerShot S90]] and [[Canon PowerShot S95|S95]] as the enthusiast "shirt pocket" option.  
 
By this point in time, Canon realized that even devoted [[DSLR]] owners sometimes sought the convenience of a pocketable camera. Accordingly, they had introduced the smaller (and RAW-capable) [[Canon PowerShot S90|PowerShot S90]] and [[Canon PowerShot S95|S95]] as the enthusiast "shirt pocket" option.  
  
The styling of Canon's enthusiast G series had always been somewhat "chunky," dating back to the original [[Canon PowerShot G1|PowerShot G1]] from 2000; so the G12's role in the new Canon lineup was to compete based on its fuller feature set: An optical viewfinder; a longer zoom range (to 140mm in [[35mm equivalent|equivalent 35mm terms]]); a [[hot shoe]] accepting Canon system flashes; optional accessory lens barrels, etc. Thus the G12 also offered both front and rear control wheels, a feature more commonly seen full-scale DSLRs.
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The styling of Canon's enthusiast G series had always been somewhat "chunky," dating back to the original [[Canon PowerShot G1|PowerShot G1]] from 2000; so the G12's role in the new Canon lineup was to compete based on its fuller feature set: An optical viewfinder; a longer zoom range (to 140mm in [[35mm equivalent|equivalent 35mm terms]]); a [[hot shoe]] accepting Canon system flashes; optional accessory lens barrels, etc. Thus the G12 also introduced dual front and rear control wheels, a feature more commonly seen full-scale DSLRs.
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 20:36, 11 July 2011

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The PowerShot G12 was a somewhat modest 2011 revision to the PowerShot G11 from Canon, retaining that model's 10-megapixel sensor and 5x zoom lens. As with the G11 and S90, the choice of a 10 megapixel sensor (believed to be a chip from Sony) emphasized good high-ISO performance, rather than escalating the "megapixel arms race" which even the PowerShot G10 had succumbed to.

With digital cameras increasingly serving double-duty as video devices, the G12 increased its video capture resolution to 720p HD, also adding stereo sound recording.

By this point in time, Canon realized that even devoted DSLR owners sometimes sought the convenience of a pocketable camera. Accordingly, they had introduced the smaller (and RAW-capable) PowerShot S90 and S95 as the enthusiast "shirt pocket" option.

The styling of Canon's enthusiast G series had always been somewhat "chunky," dating back to the original PowerShot G1 from 2000; so the G12's role in the new Canon lineup was to compete based on its fuller feature set: An optical viewfinder; a longer zoom range (to 140mm in equivalent 35mm terms); a hot shoe accepting Canon system flashes; optional accessory lens barrels, etc. Thus the G12 also introduced dual front and rear control wheels, a feature more commonly seen full-scale DSLRs.

Links