I had a email saying it was delivered a little after 7PM tonight (Sunday) but no one had heard a truck. I checked the front porch, wee have about 2 inches of fresh snow and no package and no tire tracks. I mentioned it to my wife and she suggested that I try the old Mobile Home that has been converted to a photo studio and warehouse for my business. It has a auto porch light and looks like someone might live inside. Its 200 or 300 feet away from our house towards the main road. So, I bundled up and sure enough, the truck had unloaded there at the loading dock by the front door. Fortunately, it is covered. Suprisingly, the outer box was in good condition and the camera box inside looked good.
I brought the camera back to the house and opened it. The first thing you see is a Australia / New Zealand Warranty?? Looking closer, its actually a multi area one that covers USA and Canada as well as what may be China.
I plugged it in to the USB PD charger cord on my desktop and it started charging away while I found a Micro SD card and installed it.
Then, even though it had a partial charge, I turned it on, adjusted the diopter and found the display clear and easy to read. The time setting came up and there were enough hints and a little trial and error let me set up time, date, display format. I played with the zoom button. Noise was definitely a issue at 400mm, even in my very brightly lit office. At 200 mm, it seemed fine. I took a couple photos and a video, but then formatted the card without checking them. I then checked the menu, its laid out similar to my R5 except only a few settings. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are on, I did not try to do anything with them, but I'll definitely want to download photos either via USB or Wi-Fi. Firmware 1.0.0.
There is no "Print" button, a Canon first
I have it charging again. My first negative observation is how difficult it is to set up. This is a camera that needs a C1-C3 set of memories and it doesn't have them. I can't feel or locate the buttons so I have to look. That turns the EVF off but it goes on when held to my eye. Its a slow painful process and I had to go back and correct the settings a few times because I pushed the wrong button, or more likely, the speed at which it moves thru options caused my to be on the wrong one. In a second, it can move thru a dozen or even 30 or 40. You need just a quick tap of the button you can't feel. I find that the buttons are easier to operate in portrait mode.
I just plugged it in to my PC, it was found but Canon Utility did not see it, I'll need to find out if and how its supported. I'd like to download a test image but am resisting pulling the micro SD card out and putting it in a adapter to read it. I'm going to download the user manual rather than use the printed one with small print on a large page full of folds.