If you have a £200 budget get a better camera. The SX range are OK if you want a pocketable superzoom,but image quality is not as good as some as the more enthusiast focused compacts.
I have an S95 myself,which replaced a kaput S60, and it has very good image quality. The only issue is that unlike the G series,the S series tends to have less dials,which means they can be a tad fiddly.
All of these cameras use large sensors,have manual controls and wide aperture lenses:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/...m-21/ref=nosim
http://shop.fujifilm.co.uk/fujifilm-...furbished.html
http://shop.fujifilm.co.uk/fujifilm-...furbished.html
The first two use dials too instead of fiddly buttons.
You did miss out on the Panasonic LX5 for only £240 though. That is a fantastic camera. The UI is different to cheaper Panasonic compacts due to the different control layout:
http://static.trustedreviews.com/94/...iewquarter.jpg
The TZ series are point and shot cameras and have buried menus.
The X10 is one of the nicest compacts I have used. The lens also uses a manual zoom which is pretty unique and it is built like a tank:
http://www.kenrockwell.com/fuji/imag...3-top-1200.jpg
It uses dials too.
All of these cameras were launched in the £300+ range.
The Olympus is pretty good:
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/OlympusXZ1