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LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Aug.
20, 2003 — The Canon EOS Rebel has
gone digital. Adding to the world's most popular line of autofocus SLR
cameras, the new EOS Digital Rebel combines the quality, affordability
and ease of use the Rebel is renowned for with the immediacy, vitality
and economy that digital delivers. Sleek and stylish — with a
high-grade titanium gray metallic finish — the Digital Rebel puts the
power and flexibility of a single lens reflex camera into a compact,
light weight, high performance, high resolution 6.3 megapixel package.
"With this Digital Rebel we
have added 'affordable' to the lexicon
of digital SLRs," said Yukiaki Hashimoto, senior vice president and
general manager of the Consumer Imaging Group at Canon U.S.A., Inc., a
subsidiary of Canon Inc. (NYSE:CAJ). "By leveraging the design,
engineering, and manufacturing expertise gained developing EOS
pro-digital SLRs, Canon is able to bring the Digital Rebel SLR to
consumers at a price point once reserved for digital point and shoots.
As we have with other benchmark products such as the AE-1, Sure Shot,
Rebel and ELPH, we expect to dominate an entirely new market category.
For price, power, and performance, this is one Canon that will blow the
market away."
Price and Availability
The EOS Digital
Rebel will be offered in two kit configurations: with or without the EF
18-55mm f/3.5 - 5.6 zoom lens. Initial shipments of each kit will begin
in mid-September. The estimated selling price for the zoom lens kit
which includes a battery pack and charger, plus software, manuals,
interface cables, neckstrap and Canon U.S.A. limited warranty will be
$999*. The estimated selling price for the body-only kit with the same
accessories and limited warranty will be $899*.
Image Excellence and the DIGIC™ Difference
From
the optical excellence of Canon's extensive line of EF lenses to the
large format 6.3 megapixel CMOS sensor (with its 22.7 x 15.1mm image
format and 3:2 aspect ratio), the Digital Rebel captures brilliant
images and then — thanks to Canon's exclusive DIGIC™ (Digital Imaging
Integrated Circuit) Imaging Processor — takes image quality to a new
level.
Canon developed the proprietary DIGIC image processing
technology specifically for use with its line of digital cameras. DIGIC
technology combines the roles of image processing and camera function
control into one chip and because it was designed for use in digital
cameras, it is also capable of handling JPEG compression/expansion;
memory card control; LCD/Video control and processing; gain control
(control of CCD signal amplification); Auto Exposure; Auto Focus; Auto
White Balance control and most other functions of a digital camera. The
DIGIC Processor offers the added benefit of faster display and
write-times for each image and low power consumption, saving valuable
battery power.
Fast Focus
Among the EOS Digital
Rebel's most exciting attributes is its high quality autofocus
technology, designed to enable users to capture decisive moments with
accuracy and speed. Utilizing the same 7-point AF sensor found on the
top-rated EOS 10D model, the Digital Rebel is capable of analyzing
where a subject is — even when it is off-center — and immediately bring
it into focus. It can also analyze subject movement and automatically
select locking or tracking AF modes as appropriate. These features
serve to simplify the camera's operation while maximizing its
performance. For even greater creative control, the Digital Rebel
offers users the choice of automatic and manual focusing point
selection.
The Digital Rebel's shutter speeds range from
1/4,000 of a second to 30 seconds plus Bulb, while a built-in motor
drive enables the camera to capture 2.5 frames per second in continuous
shooting mode for bursts of up to four shots. There are 12 shooting
modes including Program AE, Shutter-priority AE, Aperture-priority AE,
Auto Depth-of-Field AE and Manual as well as Full Auto, Portrait,
Landscape, Close-up, Action, Night Scene and Flash Off.
Canon's
exclusive 35-zone Evaluative metering links to the active focusing
point and is the default metering pattern in AE modes, while
center-weighted average metering is automatically selected in Manual
mode. Central-area partial metering (measuring 9.5% of the picture
area) is available on demand in Program AE, Shutter-priority AE,
Aperture-priority AE, Auto Depth-of-Field AE and Manual.
Advanced Ergonomics for Single Handed
Operation
Ergonomically
designed with the look and feel of its time tested Rebel relatives, the
Digital Rebel's main controls including the mode dial, input dial, and
shutter button are located on the right side of the body for convenient
one-handed operation. Despite its abundance of advanced features, the
Digital Rebel is the smallest and lightest member of the EOS Digital
SLR series, measuring only 5.6" (W), 3.9" (H) and 2.9" (D) and weighing
in at a mere 19.7 oz.
Adding to its ease of use, new cross key
controls (a first for the EOS digital line) are located right beside
the Digital Rebel's 1.8-inch color LCD monitor, enabling easier
navigation of the camera's menu items. When reviewing images, users can
also zoom from 1.5x to 10x magnification with 15 levels of adjustment
and scroll left, right, up and down using the cross keys. The Digital
Rebel swings back into shooting mode at the touch of the shutter
button, ensuring that the next great shot is not missed while the last
great shot is being reviewed or even direct printed.
The
Digital Rebel's mode dial is divided into Basic and Creative Zone
modes. Click on Basic and the Rebel sets the ISO speed automatically
and offers users the choice of portrait, landscape, close-up, sports,
night portrait, flash off as well as full auto modes. Enter the
Creative Zone and users can select ISO speeds from 100-1600 as well as
from five shooting modes: Program AE, Shutter-priority AE,
Aperture-priority AE, Automatic Depth of Field AE and Manual. The Flash
Off mode disables the built-in flash as well as any attached Speedlite.
Image quality can be controlled in any exposure mode by
selecting from 6 JPEG settings with varying degrees of resolution and
compression. Users shooting in Creative Zone modes can also record
high-resolution RAW files with the added advantage of simultaneous
mid-fine JPEG capture. The smaller file size of the mid-fine JPEG is
ideal for e-mailing and computer viewing while the RAW format preserves
maximum control over image processing parameters with the provided File
Viewer Utility software.
The camera's Auto White Balance (AWB)
incorporates eight preset white balance modes plus a custom white
balance setting that allows fast, easy, and accurate adjustments in
virtually any lighting condition. The Digital Rebel also features white
balance bracketing, which captures three images (normal, reddish, and
bluish) with one click of the shutter.
In a Flash
The
EOS Digital Rebel is compatible with more than 50 Canon EF lenses, high
quality EOS specific accessories and Canon's EX-series Speedlites,
making the transition to high quality digital even more affordable for
film based Rebel and EOS users. The camera's high profile, built-in
retractable flash unit makes taking pictures with well-balanced
foreground and background exposures a snap thanks to Canon's exclusive
E-TTL (Evaluative Through-The-Lens) flash exposure metering system. The
Digital Rebel also supports such advanced features as E-TTL Wireless
Autoflash; Flash Exposure Compensation; Flash Exposure Lock, and FP
Flash (high-speed sync).
Canon EF Lenses: The Short and Long of It
Canon's new compact EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 zoom lens — created
exclusively for the Digital Rebel** and available only in the Digital
Rebel Kit — approximates a 28-90mm zoom lens (in 35mm format). By
reducing the distance from the rear of the lens to the imaging sensor
and reducing the size of the image circle to accommodate the camera's
imaging sensor size, the lens produces high image quality with superb
resolution at all focal lengths. The new lens is also smaller and
lighter than conventional lenses because of the shorter backfocus
distance.
Similarly, the newly developed Canon Zoom Lens EF
55-200mm f/4.5-5.6 II USM covers a 35mm equivalent zoom range of
approximately 90-320mm when used with the Digital Rebel. Together,
these two lenses provide 35mm-equivalent zoom coverage from 28mm to
320mm.
Photo Printing Plus
When it comes to
perfectly processing and printing the pictures it captures, the EOS
Digital Rebel offers a direct print option as well as a broad selection
of in-camera processing parameters for contrast, sharpness, color
saturation and color tone. The camera's default parameters enhance
sharpness, saturation, and contrast for high-quality direct printing
with no additional image manipulation needed. An optional setting —
available only in Creative Zone shooting modes — applies standard
processing parameters for greater creative latitude during
post-processing in the user's personal computer. Digital Rebel users
can also create and store up to three sets of custom parameters
(contrast, sharpness, color saturation, and color tone) and can opt for
standard RGB color space or Adobe RGB color space in Creative Zone
modes.
Direct Printing significantly expands the appeal of the
EOS Digital Rebel by making it simple, quick and convenient to produce
high-quality photos without the need for a personal computer. Beyond
its Direct Print capability with Canon's Card Photo Printers and
acclaimed Bubble Jet Direct Photo Printers, the Digital Rebel is also
compatible with PictBridge,*** a new industry protocol that offers the
flexibility of direct printing to other brands of PictBridge compatible
printers. Features such as image cropping, date imprinting, paper
selection, and printing quantities can be controlled directly from the
camera's LCD monitor.
The EOS Digital Rebel supports Exif
Print 2.2, a worldwide standard that transfers important camera
settings and data from a camera to the printer ensuring the photos you
print will look true to life. Moreover, DPOF1.1 (Digital Print Order
Format) lets users specify the images to be printed or execute batch
printing of selected images.
The Digital Rebel also utilizes
Picture Transfer Protocol (PTP) to easily connect (via USB interface
cable) to Windows® XP and Macâ OS X (v10.1/v10.2)
operating systems
without installing any dedicated driver software. The Digital Rebel
accepts either CompactFlash® type I or type II cards, and is also
compatible with Microdrive® media cards for larger data storage.
Dedicated Accessories
Designed
exclusively for EOS Digital Rebel, the new Battery Grip BG-E1 expands
shooting capacity to up to 1,200 images (thanks to the two battery
packs it holds) and adds an auxiliary set of camera controls (shutter
release button, main dial, AF/FE lock button, AF point selection
button, Av +/- button) for easier operation while shooting portraits
and other vertical format applications.
New EF Extension Tubes
For
close-up work, Canon's new Extension Tubes EF 12 II and EF 25 II work
with many EF lenses including the EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6. The tubes'
lens mount has been redesigned to accommodate EF lenses as well as the
new EF-S lens that utilizes Short Back Focal Distance Optics. With the
extension tube attached between camera body and EF lens, users can
easily shoot magnified close-up photos.
About Canon U.S.A., Inc.
Canon
U.S.A., Inc. delivers consumer, business-to-business, and industrial
imaging solutions. The Company is listed as one of Fortune's Most
Admired Companies in America, and is ranked #43 on the Business Week
list of "Top 100 Brands." Its parent company Canon Inc. (NYSE:CAJ) is a
top patent-holder of technology, ranking second overall in the U.S. in
2002, with global revenues of $24.5 billion. Canon U.S.A. employs more
than 10,000 people at over 30 locations. For more information, visit www.usa.canon.com.
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