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Canon PowerShot ELPH 300 HS 12.1 MP Digital Camera (Black)

Canon PowerShot ELPH 300 HS 12.1 MP Digital Camera (Black)

  • World's thinnest digital camera with a 24mm ultra Wide-Angle lens and 5x Optical Zoom and Optical Image Stabilizer.
  • Canon's HS SYSTEM with a 12.1 MP CMOS and DIGIC 4 Image Processor improves shooting in low-light situations without the need for a flash
  • Full 1080p HD Video for exceptional quality with stereo sound, plus a dedicated movie button for easy access.
  • Get high-speed shooting in a point-and-shoot camera: High-speed Burst Mode captures 8.0fps and
  • Smart AUTO intelligently selects the proper settings for the camera based on 32 predefined shooting situations.
  • Super Slow Motion Movie records video at high speeds to allow slow motion playback.
  • Zoom optically while shooting video and keep footage stabilized with Dynamic IS.
  • And lowers noise levels at higher ISO settings.
The Canon 5096B001 PowerShot ELPH 300 HS Black 12MP Digital Camera with 5x Zoom and 2.7 In. LCD Display has a slim profile that will not only make you stand out from the crowd, but it will also deliver incredibly brilliant still images and amazing 1080p HD videos. Once you turn on the camera, be prepared to be amazed at how much is packed into one of the slimmest point-and-shoot digital cameras on the market. So let your imagination run free and let the HS SYSTEM, 24mm 5x Optical Zoom and 12.1 M

List Price: $ 229.00 Price: $ 229.00

Customer Reviews

1,527 of 1,541 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful compact camera with hd video, March 19, 2011
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This review is from: Canon PowerShot ELPH 300 HS 12.1 MP Digital Camera (Black) (Camera)
I'm a DSLR photographer who shoots professionally and has managed a camera store in the past. I wanted something I can take with me everywhere but still produces good quality shots. I also wanted a camera that could shoot good looking videos. I researched several models and after much deliberation decided on the Canon 300 HS. I'm very happy I did.

Image Quality:

I tested cameras and lenses all the time while managing the camera store so whenever I purchase a new camera or lens I always test it. The Canon 300 HS doesn't produce the quality of images my Nikon D7000 does but I didn't expect it to. The edges get a little soft with the 300 HS when looking at the image at 100% whereas the D7000 images are almost tact sharp.

Comparing the 300 HS to the Canon Powershot SD1000 from a few years ago, the 300 HS blows it out of the water. The SD1000 is a 7 MP camera. Shooting the same shots on a tripod with the same focal length on the lens the 300 HS uses its extra MPs well. When looking at the images from each camera at 100%, at the wide angle zoom setting and normal zoom setting both cameras have about the same relative slight softness on the edges. However the 300 HS has more MP so it actually produces much more detail in the image. I think it was smart for Canon to keep the MP at 12 because last years models while being 14 MP (SD1400) didn't give any extra detail from what I could tell than the 12 MP version (SD1300). The SD1400 was basically just creating larger files. When zooming in the telephoto setting the 300 HS clearly produced a sharper image than the SD1000. Often cameras have sweet spots in the zoom range in which it will produce crisper images. The 300 HS has consistently good sharpness throughout it's zoom range.

HS system and ISO:

The image processing with the HS system truly works to reduce noise at higher ISOs enabling people to produce better quality images in low light. The improvement in image quality gets more and more visible the greater and greater the ISO. ISO 400 with the 300 HS was almost as good as ISO 200 on the SD1000. ISO 800 on the 300 HS was a tad better than ISO 400 on the SD1000. ISO 1600 on the 300 HS was between ISO 400 and 800 on the SD1000. ISO 3200 on the 300 HS produced the same quality of image (noise) as ISO 800 on the SD1000. A 2 stop in film speed improvement is big.

1080p video and slow motion:

With good light, the 300 HS produces wonderful smooth 1080 videos. If you look at a lot of HD videos from compact cameras the video often looks jumpy. From what I've seen it wasn't until you got to the Canon G12 or Panasonic LX5 that the video looked smooth. Both of those cameras only shoot 720p whereas this camera shoots 1080p. The video also very good detail. It truly looks HD.

If you are wanting zoom and continuous AF with your video this camera is the one you want compared to the 100 HS which doesn't allow you to zoom. The continuous AF with face recognition is stellar with this camera in video mode. I was videoing my wife while she was driving. It focused on her face. I switched to the scenery outside. It immediately focused on that. I then went back to my wife and it found her face and focused on it right away. I even videoed her reflection in the rear view mirror and it found her face in the mirror no problem and focused on it. AMAZING!!!!

Commenting on a complaint I've read about the zoom being slow in video mode. If you like getting motion sickness whenever someone rapidly zooms in or out during their video this is not your camera. As smooth looking as the video is, the zoom is also. The smooth zoom creates nice looking transitions instead of warp speed ahead looks.

The slow motion is a fun feature that works well. You need to have good lighting though. In low light even with high ISO's it produced very dark videos. In a review someone commented that it should have sound with the slow motion video. I honestly don't know how that could work unless you want to listen to everything at 1/5 it's normal speed. I think it's a good thing that it doesn't have sound with the slow motion videos.

AF:

I commented on AF partially in the video portion of the review. It does have several AF modes for various situations. The face detection works great. If you have a person in the picture but want something other than the person to be in focus you will need to change AF modes from face detection. The reviewer that had the problem with the 300 HS focusing on things he didn't want the camera to focus on likely didn't have the correct AF mode for the shooting situations. The 300 HS does have a center AF if you prefer that.

Areas for Canon to improve on with the 300 HS:

The camera is so well thought out that I'm surprised Canon let this slip. I love having a wide angle zoom go down to 24mm. It's great for scenery and photojournalist type... Read more
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416 of 422 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome Point and Shoot, March 14, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This is a point and shoot class camera, if you understand that going in, you are going to be more than impressed with it. I'm going from an SD630 and hands down, this beats it. I even had an SX210IS and these images are on par with it, if not better. I had to return my SX210IS as it had issues with dust on the image sensor and I've been waiting for a new P&S class to come out. I bit the bullet on this, well, the black version Canon PowerShot ELPH 300 HS 12 MP CMOS Digital Camera with Full 1080p HD Video (Black) and what can I say - I am happy!

300HS vs 500HS:
There is a 500HS version of the camera, which is approx $50 more. To this point, the only differences I can tell are the LCD on the back as well as aperture priority and shutter priority, while the 300hs does not. The touch screen on the 500hs can also be used to focus on a particular subject. The 500hs also has a wider aperture at 2.0, the 300hs has 2.7.

Form Factor/Display:
Small. Awesome. There is a texture on the camera, I really like this as it seems like it will help if you hands are wet (sweat, snow, etc). Easy to operate one hand and if using both hands, flash isn't in a horrible place. Display is very bright and button seem intuitive as with other Canon cameras. Battery and SD are on the bottom door, USB and HDMI are in a covered side port. Comes with a wrist strap if you desire a little extra security.

Boot Time/Software:
Camera is ready to take photos very fast. From the time you press the button, it's pretty much set to catch the action. Time between photos wasn't terrible (about 1.5 seconds) and if you need it, there is continuous shot mode. Had no problem with the Canon software on Windows 7. I've used the Canon Photo Window import for a while, does a good job of getting photos off the camera without duplicates. I use Picasa to then manage my photo library (I skip the Zoom Browser, but it's really not bad if you want to use it, I'm just a slave to Google/gmail)

Computer Connectivity:
I didn't find this anywhere in the specs, so if you're looking, the camera uses mini-USB, similar to all Canon's that have come out over the last few years.

Optical Zoom:
You're going to be impressed with the form factor of this camera and it's 5x OPTICAL zoom. I immediately disabled digital zoom as 12.1MP + 5x Optical will get you very close to the action. You're better off digitally enhancing the photos later on.

Battery + Memory Card:
This uses the NBL-4 (again, I found confusion on this and accessories) - so if you have some of those laying around keep them as they'll work just fine in this camera. This is nice as my SD630 uses the NBL-4 so now I have 2 chargers + 3 batteries. It took my 32GB SDHC without any issues and holds thousands of images. Images have tended to be between 2 and 3mb on the highest settings.

Image Quality:
Look, I'm no photo fanatic, I don't expect the people buying this camera are. I am looking for solid images and this camera delivers. There are a ton a feature you can delve into and I'm sure they are good. It has manual mode, so if you fancy that, you can go down that path. But I'm the type of person that knows when something looks good, OK or great. This camera consistently delivers GREAT photos. I'm happy with the low light and images aren't blurry or grainy (within reasonable expectations).

Video:
FINALLY! Optical zoom on a Canon during video! 1080p brings this camera up to par with others in its class and it does a decent job. I didn't notice any major noise when zooming in and out while recording video. I know this is the excuse Canon has used in the past as to why they never had this feature. It shoots nice clips for those quick moments. This will NOT replace a true DV cam, but hey, for a few minute clips here and there, you will simply not be dissapointed.
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177 of 182 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great Canon product!, March 29, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Canon PowerShot ELPH 300 HS 12.1 MP Digital Camera (Black) (Camera)
I currently own a 5D Mark II and was looking to replace my Canon S80 which is now 6 yrs old. While I love the S80 and the quality pics it captured, the bulkiness of this point-and-shoot (P&S) became inconvenient. My wife was adamant she wanted a more compact P&S this time around.

In addition to great pics, I was looking for a P&S with 1080p video capability so I wouldn't have to get a separate camcorder. Let me say that the 300 HS is a quality camera packed into a sleek body that I can easily slip into any pocket on the run.

Most Canon cameras (I am a Canon loyalist) take great shots. But what most impresses me about this camera are its low-light capabilities. It obviously can not match the image quality of a DSLR, but for a P&S, I was impressed! Indoor night shots of my kids WITHOUT flash (incandescent lighting only) come out amazingly crisp with minimal noise. Autofocus is quite impressive as it tracks faces in the frame further enhancing ease of use. Menu functions are quite intuitive (if you've owned previous Canon models). It's got plenty of preset shooting modes. And it's quick between shots for a P&S (a couple seconds with flash photography).

I also compared the 1080p video vs Flip Ultra HD which shoots in 720p. The video quality is like night-and-day with the 300 HS finishing ahead by a mile. Low-light video is grainy but still watchable (unwatchable on Flip). In daylight, video looks beautiful. Video is easily imported into both iphoto and imovie. Just make sure you have a large memory card as 1080p takes up 16GB/hour of video. I bought a 32GB card.

I did purchase an extra battery after reading battery life can be short. I've had the camera a week and have used it for 15-30 minutes daily (including video capture) and I have not needed to recharge yet.

I'd also recommend the black body as it has a textured housing that makes holding this small camera much easier.

Also purchased a Caselogic TBC - 302 compact camera case which fits this camera perfectly. It has a small side pocket that I slip the extra battery in.

Overall, considering the excellent quality of the camera, easy portability, and great price, this camera is worth every penny.
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Adobe Premiere Elements 10

Adobe Premiere Elements 10

  • Take the work out of video editing with automated moviemaking options
  • Add professional polish with amazing visual and audio effects
  • Quickly showcase clips and movies anywhere, including on discs, HD TVs, Facebook, YouTube, and interactive Online Albums
  • Enjoy your photos and videos virtually anywhere you are, and get automatic online backup with 2GB of free storage
  • Adobe Premiere Elements 10 software helps you turn milestone moments into memorable movies with a complete video-editing solution
Turn milestone moments into memorable movies you'll share with pride. Adobe Premiere Elements 10-the newest version of the No. 1 selling consumer editing software-delivers automated moviemaking options that that help you create great-looking movies with less effort. Enhance your productions with professional-quality visual and audio effects. And then share them with your social network or on virtually any screen. Award winning for 10 years. Turn milestone moments into memorable movies you'll sh

List Price: $ 99.99 Price: $ 47.00

Customer Reviews

59 of 62 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally! PE10 is a winner, November 6, 2011
By 
J.H.S. (Pennsylvania United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Adobe Premiere Elements 10 (Software)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Coming from Premier 9, I didn't notice a significant visual difference between 9 and 10. The biggest differences are under the hood, like 64-bit Win 7 support. The program moves smoother and more seamlessly than previous versions. One of my biggest gripes with the previous two versions of PE was horrible performance with Nvidia laptop graphics cards. Well, I'm now running a new laptop sporting a quad-core Sandy Bridge processor, 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium and a 1GB Nvidia GPU and so far, have experienced no problems. Knock on wood, all seems to have been resolved between the two.

Installation is simple. There are five disks in the package. Disk one is for 32-bit Windows, disk two is for 64-bit Windows, disk 3 for Mac and the remaining The interface is pretty much the same although there are more options for improving color balance and exporting clips. Capturing also seems quicker and less problematic than previous versions. There are several options for capture from several camera types. Yoou can specify whether you're capturing from HDV, AVCHD, flip, video files, or other formats. The capture will configure the rest of your project to the capture type. Once footage is captured, it can be futher analyzed or you can get righ to editing. There are many different tools to help you add special effects, correct video quality, superimpose using chromakey, add transitions, pans, zooms, titles.... you name it. You can work in timeline with numerous audio & video tracks or storyboard view with clips. The tools are there to make a truly professional presentation if you have the skill and time. I'm not a film school grad or super-knowledgable about the use of effects and techniques. In fact, I find that when I apply liberal use of effects and transitions, I usually tend to make the movies too cheesy looking and distracting, so I usually only use corrective filters, a few low-key transitions and titles. If you're like me or don't have a ton of time and just want a quick movie start to finish, the magic movie option is great. It will apply themes, titles, effects, transitions, and the spit out a rendered final cut or disk in no time. For the more experienced or daring, there is very little this program can't do. There is nothing that compares in the PC realm. I haven't yet tried it on my Mac but (assuming it runs okay in Mac OSX), feature for feature, it's much better than the current iMovie and just as good as Final Cut Express 4.

Overall performance seems better, thanks to 64-bit support. Rendering times are about the same, even with increased memory and a quad-core CPU. However, I am able to multitask easier while rendering is taking place. I have also already ripped, edited, and burned a ton of high-def footage with no glitches, crashes, or problems yet. The canned DVD themes the usual cheesy styles. Although, I'm simply putting together home movies of my kids, not anything professional or commercial, I do prefer a cleaner less cheesy 70's vibe from the music and templates. I'm pretty sure you can likely find or create your own menus or themes. I haven't explored it yet but plan to do so. When your finished editing your project you can export directly to Facebook, YouTube, disk (or image), or PC files. There are a ton of export options: Flash, MPEG, AVCHD, AVI, Windows Media, Quicktime, still images and audio, with additonal export options within each specified format.

One complaint I have is the almost strong arm tactic to force you to create an Adobe ID. In this ID crazy world, I have easily over a hundred online IDs for numerous sites, trials, registrations, etc. It has gotten so annoying, I usually use a throw away emaiol for the bulk of these IDs anyhow. Well, Adobe REALLY wants you to have an Adobe ID. I tried to ignore the first dozen or so times I wwas hassled to create an ID until I wanted to try out the Inspiration browser. Well, installing the Inspiration browser was a headache in itself. First, several attempts to install it bombed, (hint, if you keep encountering an error message saying the installer is damaged, uninstall the Inspiration Browser from add/remove programs and clear the web browser cache. The try installing again). After finally getting it installed, I clicked the desktop shortcut for the Inspiration Browser. A Window opened stating the program could only be launched from within the Elements program. Great... so WHY exactly did it place a new shortcut on my desktop??? Anyway, I deletyed the useless shortcut and launched the browser from the program. Guess what? I was yet AGAIN prompted to enter an Adobe ID. At this point, I caved in and created one. Thinking I'd FINALLY get to use it, they then required me to verify my email address yet again. I did so and finally at least got past the door, but guess what? I still could not view the content. NOW, I was promted to enter a date of birth and a desired name for... Read more
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40 of 44 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars *Maybe* not worth an upgrade, October 20, 2011
By 
Okay, listen ... (Huntsville,AL,USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Adobe Premiere Elements 10 (Software)
[review has been updated - more comments at bottom]
I've been using Premier Elements 7 (PE7) for a couple of years, and it is reliable, predictable, and efficient. I mostly record things from my TV tuner card, from which I create DVD's without having to go through any additional hoops. I do not make many home videos or do outside production work.

I've been playing with the evaluation copy of PE10 and there are some alarm bells going off. My complaints are:

1. CRITICAL - Endless looping while "conforming" .AVI files that PE7 handled without any problem at all
2. ANNOYING - Always starts up in full-screen, even with a project that was saved in non-full-screen mode. Granted, it's a few mouse clicks to shrink the window, but PE7 always opened existing projects in whatever state they were saved in.
3. ANNOYING - an updater component running in the background. Can't see the need, myself. That should be my choice, not Adobe's.
4. ANNOYING - incessant nagging to join up, sign on, back up my files online, etc. (though in fairness, PE7 also has some of this too).

I have to say that issue 1 above is just a stopper, plain and simple. Some video gearheads have suggested that using a separate app to get around the conforming error, but how fiddley do we have to be here? I want to be able to do everything once in a self-contained environment, not have to go from this app to that one, and then shift files around manually and hope for the best. But the main point is this - PE7 WORKS FINE!! Why is this a problem with PE10?

Also, it just doesn't seem like there is all that much difference in usability or functionality, even if the issue above was not present. You still go through the same process - add media, edit the clips a bit, set markers, create the DVD layout, and burn. The buttons & menus & mouse clicks are all pretty much the same as always.

So I think I am staying on PE7, but that's just me. As for others, I really suggest installing the evaluation copy and seeing if it meets your needs and deciding for yourself.

[update 11/3/2011]
Well, I have decided to go ahead and get the double Premier/Photoshop Elements upgrade from Adobe at the $119 upgrade price, and am going to install and use PE10 now, despite the issues mentioned above. It appears that PE10 will process H.264 files quite nicely, and I can use those to create good quality DVD's of TV recordings. It would be nice if the .avi's work, but I think can live with it. The other annoyances are there, but most of them are there with version 7 as well and I am coping with them.

I am going to go ahead and bump up the stars to three, which should be interpreted as meaning the software does its work as expected. Still, I do not really see enough in here that is substantially different from three versions back. I will stick with what I say - download the demo, wring it out as best you can in the manner you think you will use it, and see if it gets it done for you.
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45 of 51 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars No Render for You! NEXT!!, November 3, 2011
By 
This review is from: Adobe Premiere Elements 10 (Software)
Premiere Elements, including v10 is the Soup Nazi of video editing software. If you walk the straight and narrow path, and avoid:
- memory card based video recordings
- large images
- downloaded video and audio files
- too many many edits
- long videos

... well then it may choose render a video for you. But if you want a general purpose video package that can handle different video and audio sources and render them to basic files or DVDs, you may be disappointed. If you have a youngster like me who puts together videos for school projects, well you can expect tears, frustration, and sleepless nights trying to get the program to deliver. Imagine spending hours getting your video apparently perfect in PE and then having no ability to save the video.

I've used the last 3 versions, 8.0, 8.01, 9, and now 10 and I'm throwing in the towel. I've scoured the web for help, posted in help forums, I have the latest NVIDIA card and drivers, a 4-core processor, 2 drives each with 500+ gb free, 32gb of RAM - it means nothing to this software.

I realize video processing is complex and it is unreasonable to expect a single package to handle everything out there. But PE tends to abort with the like of "Unknown Error", "Encoding Error", with absolutely no specifics. If it does not support a particular video file, it should not let you add it to your project. Or it should indicate the problem during render. It may waste an hour of your time and render to 95% and then just say "Error creating video.". No log, no indication of which clip caused the problem. To make matters worse, at times it may render a clip while at other times it will not. Sure, clear the media cache, delete the rendered files, reboot, change your render codecs and params all you like, defrag your drive, update your bios, get that latest video driver revision, check that hardware compatibility list again, etc. - but nothing helps. Or you may do as Adobe suggests - use a 3rd party video utility to convert videos to a format palatable to Premiere Elements... but doesn't that defeat the purpose?

I've used many many different software packages of all types, but never have I seen a more pitiful example of unreliable software.

I'm in the market now for a reliable alternative - I'd appreciate any non-Adobe suggestions.

Thanks!!
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