
Design
With the advent of the A60 and A70 so comes an refreshed
and more stylistic design to the body (compared to the A30 and A40). The
main design element being the logical separation of the hand grip from
the main body by the use of different color plastic and the shaping of
the hand grip against the body. From the front the A70 looks quite traditional
with a typical compact camera look, around the back is a simple control
layout with relatively large buttons and clear labelling. There is also
plenty of space left for the palm of your hand when holding the camera.
One annoying design element must be the mirrored surround to the LCD monitor,
you see yourself and whatever is behind you (on a bright day this can
mean almost blinding brightness).
Another gripe comes from the 'afterthought' connections
cover which again is a simple rubber door with no styling, it breaks the
clean lines of the side of the camera and in my opinion spoils the overall
appearance. Why can't we have a clean integrated plastic hinged door similar
to what Sony have been doing for a few years. Overall however for an entry-level
camera the A70 has a pleasing modern appearance designed to be eye-catching
on the retail shelves.
Side by side
Here beside the similarly equipped (three megapixel,
three times zoom) Nikon Coolpix 3100 the PowerShot A70 looks big, while
height and depth are the same the Coolpix 3100 is only about two thirds
the width. This size difference combined with the fact that the Coolpix
3100 only takes two AA batteries means that it weighs in 122 g (4.3 oz)
lighter than the PowerShot A70.
In your hand
The A70 isn't an ultra-compact, and if you're new to
digital cameras (more used to the size of a traditional film compact)
or have large hands you'll be glad of that. The handgrip is nicely designed
with plenty of depth and a comfortable hold, as the batteries reside in
the grip it makes the overall weight balance feel just right.

LCD Monitor
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As noted above the mirrored finish surrounding the LCD monitor
can be annoying. The LCD itself is a 1.5" TFT unit with 78,000
pixels. It's bright and clear but not as a sharp as the 110,000+
pixel units found in more expensive cameras. It is exactly what
we would expect at this price point.
The LCD monitor provides a commendable 100% frame coverage in live
view and playback modes.
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Viewfinder
The A70 has a typical 'optical tunnel' viewfinder, which
may be perfectly adequate for occasional snapshots at reasonable subject
distances but is no substitute for the 'what you see is what you get'
LCD monitor. In addition the A70 viewfinder has no dioptre adjustment
and no parallax correction lines. Note also that the center cross was
very faint compared to what we are used to. The viewfinder provides approximately
81% frame coverage.
The two lights beside the viewfinder indicate the following:
| Green
Steady |
Ready to shoot |
| Green
Flashing |
CF card activity / Computer connected |
| Orange
Steady |
Ready to shoot (with flash) |
| Orange
Flashing |
Ready to shoot but shot may suffer
from blur (slow shutter) |
| Yellow
Steady |
Macro focus / Infinity focus |
| Yellow
Flashing |
Can not focus lock, focus difficulty |

Battery Compartment
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As we expect from most entry level digital cameras the PowerShot
A70 is powered by AA batteries, four in this case. Canon only provide
Alkalines which you will want to replace with a good set of NiMH
rechargeables. These four batteries account for a third of the weight
of the camera, it's a pity Canon couldn't cut the power requirements
of the camera down to two AA's (and thus cut weight).
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