The Canon Powers hot G7 X is a premium high-performance camera that puts exciting and impressive capabilities in a sophisticated, compact package. It starts with the sensor: a large and light-grabbing 1.0-inch, 20.2 megapixel high-sensitivity CMOS sensor powered by Canon’s latest generation DIGIC 6 Image Processor for beautifully rendered low-light photography up to ISO 12800. The IS lens is a f/1.8 (W)-f/2.8 (T) that puts more in your frame while staying bright to the maximum 4.2x Optical Zoom (24mm-100mm), with a 9-blade circular aperture diaphragm for artistic background blur, and a minimum focus range of just 5cm for precise macro shooting. Wi-Fi- and NFC-enabled, the Powers hot G7 X is selfie-ready with a high-resolution multi-angle capacitive 3.0-inch touch panel LCD. Shooting is a joy with High-Speed AF (0.14 sec.), 31 AF points, full-resolution continuous shooting up to 6.5 fps and 1080p/60p HD video. Designed to provide stellar images, the Powers hot G7 X is a compact digital camera powered to inspire your most impressive photography.
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An excellent camera First of all, I would like to mention that I did not buy the camera through Amazon. I found a very good deal from another store, but I bought the Canon Deluxe Leather Case PSC-5300BK, Canon Battery Pack NB-13L, and Sandisk Extreme SDXC 64 GB memory card through Amazon to be used with this camera. In the end I spent around $750 for everything, which was a good deal.A little background. I have been an avid user of DSLRs since the last 10 years. The main reason I started using DSLRs was not because of the choice of multiple lenses but the features, e.g. bigger sensor, less noise, bigger aperture for blurring the background (nice bokeh), aperture, shutter, iso and manual controls. I owned Canon EOS 400D or Rebel Ti for 8 years or so, but always used a general walk around Tamron 17-50 f2.8 lens with it. I believe this background information is necessary to explain why I sold my DSLR and moved to G7x.A DSLR captures very high quality photos, but one must always…
High Quality and Pocketable Finally, a competitor to the Sony RX100 series. I’ve been comparing the Canon G7X to my Sony RX100 for a couple of days. Here are some of my observations:* Sony is slightly less thick and weighs a bit less. But both are definitely pocketable.* Contrary to a review I read on Dpreview, the autofocus on the G7X is very fast…faster (more responsive) than the one on the RX100. I suspect Dpreview may have gotten a defective sample. But this one is lightning fast outdoors, and indoors. Even in fairly low light, the autofocus never hunted. It always snapped into focus instantly.* shot to shot using JPEG is also very fast. I reeled off a dozen continuous shots with no slow down at all. Switch to RAW and the camera slows down considerably. It spends about 1 second to save the RAW file before letting you get another shot off.* The G7X has an automatic lens cover which retracts when you turn it on, and closes when you turn the camera off.*. The…
A well-priced alternative to the RX100iii. It’s pretty obvious that when Canon was making this camera it had it’s target set to Sony’s RX100 series of cameras. I was divided between buying the RX100iii or the G7X, finally opting for the Canon. They are approximately the same size, feature an 1 inch sensor (significantly bigger than other compacts) and have similar feature sets.(Disclaimer: I own the G7X for about a week now and have been shooting with it around Beijing. I’ve only handled the RX100iii on a camera store and read online reviews and impressions.)You can read reviews about the RX100iii here: The main advantages of the Canon compared to the Sony are:+Longer focal range (24-100mm vs 24-70mm). I find the extra 30mm extremely useful both for portraits and semi-telephoto shots.+Brighter aperture through the range. The Canon stops down slower and has a 2/3…