In the Costa Rica trip (November 2008), for the first time I have taken with me a second camera, other than my workhorse Canon 1DsIII. My second body has been the Sigma DP1, one of the most interesting compact cameras on the market: what makes is so special is its sensor, an APS-C Foveon CMOS, much bigger than the sensor of all other compact cameras. In other words, the DP1 has the hearth of a SLR into the body of a digicam!
The Sigma DP1 is different from all other digicams, and for sure it is not a camera for everyone. It is expensive, it has a prime lens (28mm equivalent f/4) with no image stabilization, it is quite slow and it has a very limited movie mode: if you are looking for an all-around digicam for family photos the DP1 is not the camera for you.
If, instead, you want the maximum image quality, a sharp lens with minimal optical aberrations, RAW, and a well built camera body with complete manual controls, the Sigma DP1 may be a good choice. The first thing that I have noticed, looking at the camera body, is its minimalist design. There are few buttons, and on the main dial there are only the "creative" exposure modes (Program, Aperture priority, Shutter speed priority, Manual), plus a single automatic mode, video mode and audio recording. It has not the 20-30 scene modes that are now the standard in most digicams - and this is a great plus in my opinion; scene modes are just gimmicks to attract unexperienced photographers...if you have some experience, you will know that P, S, A, M are all you need to have complete control on the exposure.
Other than that, the Sigma DP1 has a well thought menu interface - it is very intuitive, you won't need to check often the user manual to understand how it works.
 
Main Camera Specifications