Conclusion: The Canon PowerShot A620 is a very competent midsized camera that's a good fit for both beginners and enthusiasts, and it gets my highest recommendation. With both automatic and manual shooting modes, very good movie and continuous shooting features, and expandability, the A620 is a lot of camera for under $400. The A620 is a midsized camera...
Conclusion: After working with so many different resolution cameras, it seems as if Sony's 7.1-megapixel imager is one of the best out there for consumer and prosumer models. Using the A620's Large SuperFine mode produced awesome results both indoors and out. Our outdoor samples are sharp with good contrast from edge to edge and color saturation is excellent...
Conclusion: Canon's PowerShot line of digital cameras have always been big favorites of IR readers, valued for their user-friendly design, excellent photo characteristics, and good build quality. The Canon PowerShot A620 is an estimable addition at the top of that line, sporting a 7-megapixel CCD and a very good quality 4x optical zoom lens. It offers...
Together with the Canon PowerShot A610, the PowerShot A620 replaces the wildly popular PowerShot A95. This model incorporates a 7-megapixel CCD, and both have a modestly updated body design, use the same 4X zoom lens as that of the Canon G series, and boast a 2-inch LCD.
Marketing Date
August 2005
Camera Type
Standard Point and Shoot
Image Sensor Type
CCD
Resolution
7.4 MP
Image Resolutions
640 x 480 , 2592 x 1944 , 2048 x 1536 , 1600 x 1200 , 3072 x 2304