Tuesday, November 06, 2012

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small SensorâWhat Gives?

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5955260/canon-g15-review-fast-lens-small-sensor++what-gives

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?Canon's "G" line of cameras have always appealed to point-and-shooters looking for more of a pro experience. The new G15 has some great details—is it a $499 camera worth considering?

What Is It?

A hefty $499 point-and-shoot camera with plenty of controls and a really fast lens.

Who's It For?

Shooters who want physical manual controls, but a cheaper price tag than mirrorless cameras with interchangeable lenses.

Design

Kudos on this one, Canon. Where looks are concerned, the G15 goes the distance. Everything is well-proportioned and well-placed, with an understated, sleek, yet classic look to it. It is small-ish and more compact than the camera it replaces, the G12. But it's still not too comfortable in a pants pocket.

Using It

It's like any other Canon point-and-shoot. Good, user-friendly controls, and no real surprises when operating the G15. It contains a familiar 12.1 MP CMOS sensor and DIGIC 5 processor, with a 5x optical zoom lens that works out to the full-frame equivalent of 28-140mm. It has a tucked-away flash, and a hot-shoe if you need to mount a better one up top. The real story is the lens, which rocks a freaking crazy awesome f/1.8-2.8 aperture.

The images you will produce are quite nice. For a compact, it packs decent sharpness and solid high ISO performance, with an ISO range topping out at 12800. But you will find better quality in larger-sensor cameras like Canon's higher-priced $799 G1X.

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?

The Best Part

That ultra-fast f/1.8-2.8 aperture makes for low-light goodness and a shallow depth of field. Even the terrific Sony RX100 can't match that at the long end.

Tragic Flaw

The real limitation here is sensor size. 1/1.7 inches just cannot compete with the likes of the Sony RX100, or Canon's higher-end G1X, which has a 1.5-inch sensor. Sure, these cameras are more expensive than the G15, but it still seems like the G15's wonderful lens—which is superior to both the RX100 and the G1X—is going to waste on a small sensor.

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?

This Is Weird

The rough matte finish is nice but chalky, almost like sandpaper. It will get dirty fast.

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?

Test Notes

  • Canon said goodbye to the articulating display of the G12. This is a controversial decision that some will sneer at, but we think that unless you shoot a lot of video, the trade-off in bulkiness is worth it.
  • The optical viewfinder does not need to be there. It zooms with the lens, but at the long end of the zoom range, it is way off from the picture you are taking. Can't focus with it, can't do anything with it.
  • Video quality is good, with decent auto-focus, but you can only record at 24 fps in full 1080p. In 720p, you can record at 30 fps.
  • There is a lens ring that looks like it would be great for manual focus or aperture adjustment, but actually its only purpose is to house a mount for a telephoto conversion accessory. Total bummer.
  • You can record video in any mode, but there is a dedicated video setting on the mode dial. Weirdly, it doesn't seem to be any different than other modes except for access to one video-related setting in the function menu. You can record video in any mode.
  • The display is large and beautiful, but it would be great if it were a touch-screen. Canon knows how to do it right, as seen on the T4i, so why not include it on the G15?
  • Battery life is rated at 350 shots (the G12 was 390).
  • Our full size images can be seen here.

Canon G15 Review: Fast Lens, Small Sensor—What Gives?

Should You Buy It?

As long as you are OK knowing that the the image quality is stuck a notch below larger-sensor cameras, most of the G15's other attributes are a pleasure. It costs $50 more than the Panasonic LX-7, which we liked a lot. Then, for $100 more, you can get the great Fuji X10, with a 2/3-inch sensor and better image quality.

At $499, the G15 is in the middle of a nice pack—and it's a truly satisfying camera to hold and use—but nothing pushes it above and beyond the competition. We hope that sweet lens makes its way to Canon's follow up to the Canon's G1X—then, a better sensor would do it justice.


Canon Powershot G15
• Sensor: 12.1 MP CMOS
• Lens: 28-104mm f/1.8-2/8 (35mm equivalent)
• ISO Range: 80-12800
• Display: 3" with 922,000 dots (non-articulating)
• Video Recording: 24 fps @ 1080p, 30 fps @ 720p
• Price: $499
Gizrank: 3.5

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RISC OS lands on the Raspberry Pi, relives the glory days

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/06/raspberry-pi-RISC-OS/

RISC OS lands on the Raspberry Pi, relives the glory days

The Raspberry Pi received a RAM boost recently, but it certainly won't need it to run the latest officially supported operating system -- RISC OS. A far cry from Linux variants the naked board is used to, RISC OS was developed in the late eighties by the same hotshots who designed the first ARM processor. Fittingly, it's also related to the OS found on the BBC Micro, a computer that shared the Raspberry Pi's educational vision. Don't expect much from the simple OS, but it will run extremely fast given the Pi's hardware is practically futuristic compared with the computers it was intended for. The simplicity does mean, however, that it's much easier to get right into the system and start tinkering. It was formerly a closed-source OS, so luckily, there are a bunch of Programmers' Reference Manuals (PRMs) available to kick-start your next project. Whether you are totally new to RISC OS, or excited to dive in for nostalgia's sake, head to the source link for everything you'll need.

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RISC OS lands on the Raspberry Pi, relives the glory days originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Nov 2012 08:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android 4.2 core apps and Google Wallet APKs released for pimping your Galaxy Nexus

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/06/android-4-2-core-apps-google-wallet-galaxy-nexus/

Android 4.2 core apps and Google Wallet APKs released for pimping your Galaxy Nexus

If you just can't wait for the official Jelly Bean 4.2 update to land on your Galaxy Nexus, you can at least do a pretty good job of faking it. Last week saw the camera and gallery apps from the latest iteration of Google's OS ported to the Nexus, and this week, Twitter user @KillDroidHack has done the honors of releasing another cluster. All Android 4.2 core apps -- such as Gmail, Maps, Calendar and the like -- are now available in APK form, as well as the newest version of Google Wallet. So, if you want the fresh set on your Nexus and have the loading know-how, head over to the Dev-Host links below to find the files you need.

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Android 4.2 core apps and Google Wallet APKs released for pimping your Galaxy Nexus originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Nov 2012 09:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Chrome 23 in finished form brings Do Not Track, graphics boosts for Windows users

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/06/google-chrome-23-in-finished-form-brings-do-not-track/

Google Chrome 23 in finished form brings Do Not Track, graphics boosts for Windows users

As cutting-edge as Google can be, its Chrome browser has trailed in supporting Do Not Track by default; all its major challengers already have the option to cut off tracking cookies. At least that's where Google's fast-track development process comes in handy. Following a short beta, the stable release of Chrome 23 includes the DNT protocol to both safeguard privacy and prevent a few eerily well-targeted ads. The update is more fine-grained still with a quick drop-down menu to selectively turn off access to cameras, location and other sensitive details on a site-by-site basis. Even those who live their life in public get something: Windows users at last have graphics hardware acceleration for video, giving a lift to battery life on laptops and smoothing playback for those on borderline-acceptable PCs. More details are available at the source link, so get to clicking if you're not a fan of small text files shadowing your web visits.

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Google Chrome 23 in finished form brings Do Not Track, graphics boosts for Windows users originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Nov 2012 14:09:00 EDT. Plea! se see o ur terms for use of feeds.

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CSR outs new Coach16 processor for high-end cameras, aims to kill video jaggies, noise

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/06/csr-outs-new-coach16-processor-for-high-end-cameras/

CSR outs new Coach16 processor for highend cameras to kill video jaggies, noise

If you've ever cussed out your DSLR because your still shots or video had excessive aliasing, jello and noise, you might be happy to hear about the new Coach16 imaging chip from CSR. The new addition to the ex-Zoran line of imaging processors is aimed at DSLRs and mirrorless cameras, and for the cinema set brings 1080/60p HD video with 'super-resolution' RGB downscaling to eliminate aliasing caused by line-skipping. Still shooters would get "endless sustained burst" high frame-rate capability, multi-frame noise reduction for improved low-light shooting, USB 3.0 support, high resolution EVF capability and smart flash. The latter feature cleverly takes two pictures rapidly with and without a flash, then marries the best parts HDR style for the final image. We won't see any of that until it gets released in a new DSLR model, of course, but meanwhile, you can dream with the PR below the break.

Continue reading CSR outs new Coach16 processor for high-end cameras, aims to kill video jaggies, noise

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CSR outs new Coach16 processor for high-end cameras, aims to kill video jagg! ies, noi se originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Nov 2012 15:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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