First of all, I’ve had 4 Canon cameras before this one (the legendary A80, the A95, the recent A560, and the Rebel XT, which was stolen). Also, I work as a photographer for a local newspaper and we constantly use high-end Canon SLRe and G series compact canons. Let me tell you that the quality of this little guy (the first Elph I’ve had) is impressive. Actually, I would say this is on top with the “G” and SLR series picture quality, if you know how to make a few adjustments.
I’ve had the Canon powershot SD1000 for 6 months, I’ve taken it to a few trips, parties, work events, and I carry it in my pocket every day. The features it has (like face detection, digital macro, time-lapse video, color accent, etc.), for the price, are fantastic. However, the best thing this camera offers, IMHO, is a quick operation. It takes VERY FAST pictures, and if you set the color to vivid, with a proper white balance, the images you get will surprise you. I recently had a trip to Cancun and took the camera with me. When I came back I wrote an article about my trip for the Sunday Magazine at my newspaper, and they used my pictures, as they looked very professional.
If you’re a casual photographer, you can’t beat this price, get it now.
There’s ONE thing, however, I still hope canon introduces in the future: a more practical video mode format.
I’m not saying the video quality is bad. Actually it is the best I’ve seen in ultra-compacts. The thing is, that after having owned a Pentax Optio s5z for a year (before this one), which used good quality divx compression (much smaller files), I found myself taking many videos without worrying about remaining space in the memory card. The “video thing” started growing a lot on me. However, canon uses almost no compression in the AVI files and so, for each 1GB of memory, you can only record 8 minutes of video (2GB = only 16 minutes!).
About the image stabilization: I don’t miss it. If your hands are not very shaky and you use the proper ISO, you can overcome this. However, if you’re using 1600 ISO, you will see “grains” unless you keep the picture to “web sharing” size. It’s normal with compact cameras.
My next camera will be (if it’s still on sale) the Canon SD750, because I recently found it has a 3 inch LCD, and I don’t really use the viewfinder on the Canon SD1000 (a personal choice).
Bottom line: for vacations, every day use, social snapshots, pets, the occasional “artistic” inspiration, fantastic response and pro-quality images at a very affordable price, you can’t go wrong with this camera.