Unbiased digital camera reviews, advice, and prices
Note: This camera was first sold in Aug 2005. It has been replaced by the Canon A630.
Canon PowerShot A620
Canon PowerShot A620
B-
HQ Grade: B-
A is outstanding and exceptional, rated in the top 10% of digital cameras.
B means they are good, with some standout features.
C means they are mediocre, and probably more trouble than they are worth.
D & F mean they are absolutely awful or old. Avoid at all costs.
  • 5 out of 5
"A610 and A620 are excellent camera also to photograph documents"
  • 5 out of 5
"Pleasanty impressed"
See rating based on 569 user reviews
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Question Answered!
Sachin Pednekar (sachinsp76) 0 pts
December 7, 2008 11:29 PM

I bought a new 8GB SDHC memory card. Is this compatible with my Canon Powershot A620 Digital camera?

When I insert the card into the camera and switch it on, I get the error "Memory Card Error". I have checked that the card is unlocked. Still keep getting the same error. I will appreciate if anyone can advise on this.
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Answers This question has been answered!
Brenda P (BrendaP) 28728 pts
December 13, 2008 9:20 PM
1 people rated this answer helpful, 0 people rated this answer not helpful
 
Canon's website says this camera can only take up to 2GB cards.
Best Answer
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by James DeRuvo (byjamesderuvo) 58446 pts
December 16, 2008 4:31 PM
0 people rated this answer helpful, 0 people rated this answer not helpful
 
But that isn't a bad thing. Allow me to make an pitch for using several cards, rather than one large one. Reason being, insurance. Any memory card can fail or become corrupted. And when you're on vacation the last thing you want is to lose the opportunity to take pictures until you can recover that media card with a software utility. If your card goes bad, swapping another one for it at that moment is of advantage so you can keep taking pics. Then, later when you're in front of your PC, you can use a utility like "F-Recovery" to get back your pictures and recover your card.

No need to lose the moment because you relied on one card one when several can solve that problem. At the very least, you want to get more than one of whatever size you settle on.

One last thing. Cards have different speeds. The faster a card is, the quicker it'll save the photo and cycle to be ready for another shot. In the end, your camera is only going to be as fast as it's slowest link in the chain. So check for speed when you purchase a card.

That's where your money should go to anyway, speed.
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