Canon Powershot A75 Description

The A75 captures good images for the money. Its bright and crisp 1.8-inch LCD screen and well-placed controls will satisfy most novices (after a brief tour through the manual), though it's missing some pro features like a variable-angle LCD and the ability to create your own custom shooting modes (both of which are found on the Canon PowerShot A80).
Canon Powershot A75 Features
The PowerShot A75 features a 3x (35-105mm equivalent) Canon optical zoom lens with a 3.2x digital zoom lens and can focus as close as 2 inches from the subject (in macro setting). New for 2004, the A75 digital camera features a larger and markedly improved 1.8-inch 118,000-pixel LCD monitor with a histogram display and a zoom capability of up to 10x on playback. Among the other upgraded features on the PowerShot A75 is the camera's new nine-point autofocus system (improved from the A70's five-point system).
- Impressive Imaging Power - 3.2 Megapixel CCD
- Get a better look at what you are shooting
- Easy, flexible Direct Printing Options
- Precision Shooting Made Easy
- Special Scene Modes
- USB interface
- Advanced Imaging Technology
Canon Powershot A75 Reviews
DPReview.com
Canon, a leader in photographic and imaging technology, today announces the release of its new range-opening zoom lens digital camera, the 3.2 Megapixel PowerShot A75. The camera has a number of new features including a 'Special Scene Mode' to deliver optimal results in tricky lighting conditions and a Print/Share button to simplify direct printing and uploading to Windows PCs.
Review was posted in Feb 9, 2004 more...
Imaging-resource.com
The Canon PowerShot A75 is the 2004 update to Canon's wildly popular PowerShot A70 model from 2003. Changes from the earlier PowerShot A70 are evolutionary rather than revolutionary, but there are plenty of them nonetheless. There's a larger LCD (1.8 inches, up from 1.5), more Special modes, and a faster, more efficient DIGIC processor. Review posted 05/15/2004 more...
CNET.com
If you want to smoke the competition by going from 0 to 11 frames in less than 6 seconds, you'll be delighted by the high-speed burst mode of this replacement for the popular PowerShot A70. Canon kept all the good stuff intact, including the 3X optical zoom, the versatile manual and automatic controls, and the above-average image quality, while providing a larger LCD, improved autofocus, significant ergonomic improvements, and handy scene presets for the most common shooting situations. Reviewed July 15, 2004 more...