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The best digital camera available for the money!, September 27, 2004
Reviewer: Burke Churchill
And that includes all the offerings from Nikon, Olympus, and
Minolta/Konica. I LOVE this camera. The 10D was felt by many to have
focusing issues and though I did not have any significant problem with my
10D in that regard the 20D represents a substantial improvement in this
area. Canon still is not offering (in this price range) a camera with eye
control or 45 focusing points, BUT the nine focusing points that ARE
offered are well placed and the camera focuses quickly and surely
resulting in tack sharp photos.
The pictures this camera takes are simply beyond belief. Beautifully
saturated, tack sharp, NO, and I mean NO noise at 400 or below and barely
discernible noise all the way up to 1600 ISO. For all practical purposes
1600 ISO is an entirely usable speed resulting in fantastic pictures. What
Canon has accomplished in reducing noise and increasing pixel density
proves that they are, for now, the technology leader.
Another big advantage over the 10D is the instant on feature which does
not leave you sitting there helplessly until the camera turns on. That
happens instantly! A new flash system, ETTL II is a vast improvement over
the 10D. And, to my eye, there is an improved dynamic range with slightly
less blown highlights.
The in camera processing results in far more pleasing pictures than the
previous 10D or Digital Rebel. This camera has a greater burst (more
pictures quicker) that the previous 10D.
Now there is currently an issue with mirror lockups reported by probably
10% - 20% of all owners. If you encounter this problem before you update
the firmware then simply take the battery out of the camera, reinsert it,
and you're good to go. Canon has issued a fix and it is available on their
web site. It completely remedies the problem so, not to worry!
One of the greatest things about digital photography is the ability to
build a digital dark room for next to nothing. With the included Photoshop
Elements you are well on your way to producing pictures that you could
only have imagined in the pre-digital days. I am able to recoup pictures
that I never would have considered salvageable before this camera.
The other thing I like about Canon is the lens system which IMO is second
to none. Also, Canon continues to innovate at a furious pace driving the
price of these digital cameras relentlessly downward.
I sold my 10D to purchase this camera and for me it represented a
significant improvement more than justifying the cost of the upgrade.
So, I LOVE the camera. LOVE Canon. And LOVE digital. All in all I'd say
I'm a pretty happy camper!
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A good upgrade from the Digital Rebel, September 26, 2004
Reviewer: N. Schweitzer "aznick"
I purchased the 20D as an upgrade from my Digital Rebel. The cost was
certainly worth it.
This camera has many, many advantages to the Rebel (as I'm sure other
reviewers will point out), but I thought three were worthy of mention:
ISO 1600 and 3200 have very, very low noise. This means that I am now able
to get low-light shots that I never could before. For example, I often
take pictures of crowded streets at night. Before, I needed to use a flash
or else my shots would be blurred by camera shake and the motion of people
walking. Now (with the help of a f1.8 lens) I can set the camera at
ISO3200 and have the shutter speed be fast enough that I can get clear
images. In fact, when I use the Black & White mode, the picture is
virtually noise-free.
Rapid-Fire burst mode. When the "multi-shot" function is on, this camera
fires like a machine gun. It also writes the images to the memory card
much faster than the Rebel ever did. I shot a series of 25 shots in 5
seconds, and it still had them all on the card 6 seconds after I stopped
shooting.
Black and White mode. Not just some toy feature, when you are saving as a
JPG file (not RAW), the image is actully encoded as a B&W image--meaning a
smaller file size. This means more shots per card, and also more shots
being able to be held in the buffer. I was actully able to record 90
frames of B&W images (JPG-Large-Fine) at full speed (5 per second) without
stopping (onto a 40x CF card).
Like I said before, I'm sure there are tons of other amazing features of
the 20D, but I wanted you to know my favorites.
UPDATE: Over the past few months, there have been reports that the 20D
locks up on occasion. I had that happen to me only once. Canon has posted
a firmware upgrade on it's website that remedies this problem (as well as
a few others). I upgraded, and have not had any problems since.
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