Canon's latest digital SLR delivers the functionality that enthusiasts require at a breakthrough sub-AU2,000 price.
It´s been a while since we´ve become quite so excited about a new product, but Canon's EOS 300D will definitely spark an epidemic among enthusiast photographers who have been waiting for an affordable, interchangeable-lens digital SLR.
Based on the company's popular 35mm EOS 300 SLR line, the 300D offers about 85 percent of the feature flexibility of its bigger, more expensive brother, the EOS 10D, at the revolutionary price of AU$1,999 which buys you the camera body and a EF-S 18-55mm f3.5-to-f5.6 zoom lens -- equivalent to 28mm to 88mm on a 35mm SLR.
Even if it didn't support interchangeable lenses -- including the complete catalogue of Canon EF-mount products -- this digital SLR would still have great specifications for the price: a 6.3-megapixel CMOS sensor; seven manually selectable autofocus points; and a four-shot, 2.5-frame-per-second continuous shooting speed, regardless of resolution.
The EOS 300D does sacrifice some controls, which, depending upon how you shoot, may be critical. Although it offers three metering modes -- evaluative, partial and centre-weighted average -- it automatically decides when to use evaluative and centre-weighted, and you can only toggle partial. Similar limitations apply to focus tracking. Furthermore, it even shares some of the inconveniences of the EOS 10D, including a viewfinder that shows only 95 percent of the frame and the absence of spot metering.
When the EOS 300D ships in early October, we think it will be the enthusiast camera to beat, especially since Sony's DSC-F828 won't ship for another couple of months. But stay tuned -- there's an evaluation unit en route to us and a review forthcoming.



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