My wife and I got an Ixus 50 (well, a Powershot SD400, which is the same thing) for her parents for Christmas. It seems to be very good at what it does, and the price right now is very good. Six months ago, we got a Nikon Coolpix 5900 (having roughly the same specs as the Powershot S400), which Nikon promptly cancelled, and none of the replacement cameras have quite the same specs at the low price point.
Meanwhile, post-Christmas, a bunch of new cameras have been announced, and more can be expected next month in the lead up to PMA. Of the current batch of announcements, the one that caught my eye is the
Kodak Easyshare V570, which has a clever, dual-lens design that gives it the widest-angle view in the class. If that isn't a very big deal, then the features I'd be looking for (in order of importance) would be:
- fast / low-light autofocus
- optical image stabilization
- decent performance at high ISO
(all of the above making it easier to shoot indoors, at night, without a flash)
- full VGA video mode (i.e., 640x480, 30fps)
The full video mode is actually more valuable than you'd think. For capturing silly/cute baby interactions, in particular, the full-res video mode of our Coolpix is good enough to burn DVD videos that look almost as good as video from my older Canon ZR-10 (mini-DV video camera). The dedicated video camera has lower noise, but not really a big deal, one way or other. It's sure more convenient to carry one gizmo that does it all.
Price-wise, it seems that $250 is something of a magic number, which is followed by $400 as the next magic number. $250 gets you a variety of quality cameras, like the Powershot SD400. They're "current", but not top-of-the-line. $400 gets you top-of-the-line, which may or may not be any meaningful improvement. If you want to spend real money, that's what the D-SLRs are all about...