Playback Features

If the camera is already in a record mode, you can switch to playback mode by sliding the Mode Switch to Play. With the unit off, you can power up the camera in play mode without extending the lens. To browse through images/videos, press left/right on the 4-way controller.


Image thumbnail view

Image regular view

Image magnified

An image can be magnified in 10 increments by pressing the zoom controller towards the telephoto end. While an image is magnified, you can move to different areas of the picture by using the 4-way controller. We found this process to be very smooth and fast. To fit the image back to screen, you can press the Menu button. To view a thumbnail screen with 9 images, press the zoom controller toward the wide end. If you press toward the wide end again, you can scroll through sets of images 9 at a time. To delete a single image, press down on the 4-way controller. A dialog will appear to confirm your decision.


No Info.

Info.

Detailed Info.

By pressing the Disp. button, you can cycle through three different displays. The default display only shows the image with no information to accompany it. By pressing the Disp. button, the following information will appear: file number, number of picture out of total on card, resolution, quality, date, and time. Another press of the Disp. button will add the following information to the display: record mode, exposure compensation, white balance, flash, metering, macro/infinity, and a histogram.


Edit movie screen

After selecting a video clip, the SD300 offers several options. On top of simply playing a clip, you can go through the clip frame by frame or in one of 4 increments of slow motion. The volume can be adjusted at any time by pressing up/down on the 4-way controller. There is even an option to edit a video clip. You can select a new beginning and/or ending and then either save the edited version as a new file or overwrite the original. Another cool feature is that you can view the histogram for every frame in the clip.

By pressing the Menu button, the following options will be displayed:

 Play Menu
Protect Select
Rotate Select, Rotate
Sound Memo Record, Play, Delete
Erase All Cancel, OK
Slide Show Program: (All images, Show 1 -3),
Play Time (Manual, 3 - 10, 15, 30 sec.)
Repeat (On, Off)
Print Order Order (Select)
Set up: Print Type (Standard, Index, Both), Date (On, Off), File No. (On, Off)
Reset
Transfer Order Order (Select), Reset

The Protect option allows you to mark images as protected so that they cannot be erased accidentally. Formatting the SD card, however, will erase all images even if they are protected. With the Sound Memo option, you can record audio clips to go along with your pictures. The audio clips are recorded as WAV files with the same file number as the picture. The maximum recording length is 60 seconds. By selecting images in the Print Order section, you can specify images for printing on a DPOF-compatible printer. You have the option to print an index as well as to stamp the date and/or file number on your pictures. With the Transfer Order option, you can specify which images the camera should transfer when it is connected to a computer. The pictures will be transferred in the order in which they were taken (oldest first).

Recording Features Battery Performance
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  • ElFenix - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    your title is funny

    best [class] camera in its class?

    =)

    nice review, otherwise. i really want a small camera for parties, etc. my S40 takes up too much space in my pocket, along with my cell phone.
  • TrueWisdom - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    I'm of the opinion that the Casio EXILIM series are better cameras than these. I have the Z-55 and it's the speediest 5MP ultracompact I've come in contact with. I'd like to see Anandtech do a review of the Z-40, Z-50, Z-55, and the EX-S100 to see how they stack up.
  • drwho9437 - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    Quasi review:

    I have an SD200 which is the same camera apart from the sensor, (3.2 instead of 4, save 100 dollars). Things to note about the SDX00 series (new 400, and 500 were introduced).

    Firstly, there are more CAs then the average digital (purple fringing), quite alot of it looks to be blooming (ie leakage charging). The lens is definatly soft in the corners, this seems to be the most distrubing when you have something with random high detail, ie tree branches, but not so bad when you have uniform high detail, say grass.

    These cameras are said not to have an aperture, instead, they are said to have a ND filter, to cut the light in half. There have been some comments that corner softness in lessed when the camera decides to shoot at a high "aperture" but I have not confired them. The camera itself does not display the shutter speed or aperture even in review mode so its difficult to do that test.

    On the flipside I did notice corner softness decrease as focal length increased (probably because that really works like an aperture, it uses just the center of the lens at tele), so if you want a really sharp picture of something standback and zoom in. (I never thought I'd say that).

    The video mode is good, but you'll need a fast SD card to do it at 640X480 30fps consistently. The one I have is borderline, and depends what I am taking it of, a little ! warns the buffer is getting full. However 320X240 modes always works for those really long videos at need, if your card ends up not being quite fast enough.

    So it is clear I got this camera, so that I would always have a camera with me, I have SLRs for the good stuff, I new about most of the issues I mentioned before I got it, most of them can be worked around.

    The highest prase I can give it is I didn't return it.
  • Souka - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    I have a Canon S300 (over 3 years old...) and I'm looking to replace it.

    I really really like the S410, but once I saw the SD300 I was hooked, the DigiII chip speed rocks.

    Well alomst hooked.... The point of a camera is to take pictures....good pictures in my opinion.

    The SD300 does a good job, but the flare from flashes and the purple fringing are horrible. I've compared side-by-side shots of my S300 to the SD300. My old S300 takes MUCH better pictures despite 1/2 the resolution (and twice the weight and size!.....but if I wanted to enlarge a print...to lets say 8x10...the SD300 is better.

    I guess the S410 is my best option for now.... I'll live with the puny LCD and useless video mode....it's a camera damnit, not a vide camera.

    Anyhow.... maybe the SD310 will be better? (A guess)

    Cheers....

  • stephencaston - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    #12, I agree with #14. Unless you really need the extra MP, I would go with the SD300 for its speed. If you really want a 5 MP ultra-compact, it might be worth waiting until the SD400 becomes available.
  • R3MF - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    @ #6

    cheers, i didn't know that. :)
  • tyipengr - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    Sorry for the blank post earlier...

    #12-

    I considered the same two cameras before ultimately purchasing the SD300. The speed of the Digic II, the vastly superior movie mode, and the 2-in. LCD got me at the end. I personally do not edit pictures very much so the extra 1-MP isn't as important to me. 4 MP is enough for 8x10s which is the largest I will ever blow up a pic.

  • tyipengr - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

  • brownba - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    Stephen: I'm looking to buy a camera for my wedding this summer. I'm sure it'll be one of the canon elph's. The S500 is almost the same price as this SD300, which would you recommend? or just in general, which ultra-compact would you recommend?
  • sxr7171 - Thursday, February 24, 2005 - link

    I have this camera and it probably is the top digital camera in its size class. There are some downsides to having such a small camera especially with regard to the purple fringing, and some of the graininess in night shots (due to the tiny photosensor), but it has some crazy attributes that make an amazing camera. One is the unreal speed of this thing. It is ready to take pictures within a second of turning on and it takes pictures with almost no delay at all when already powered on. It also has unreal battery life. I tested it once at home by taking 50% flash shots continuously in rapid-fire mode and it took over 1700 shots before the battery died. These things make it almost flawless for its main purpose - to take a bunch of casual pictures when on vacation without worrying about the battery dying and to get the shot you want without losing it while the camera is still trying to focus/turn on/bring the lens out etc.


    Does anyone know if there is a way to reduce the oversharping though? I'm not too happy about that. I know the Digital Rebel comes with sharpness set a little high by default but they allow you to reduce back to the EOS-10D/20D default levels.

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