I'll add my vote for the A85 as well, bought one about a month ago to replace an older broken P&S digital and I couldn't be happier, and I've already blasted through around 1k pictures with it so far.
To go with the above, the pluses on either the A95 (5mp with a swing around LCD) or A85 are spot on, I bet for the 3MP A75 as well. Although my shutter speed runs up to 1/2000

(I'm pretty sure that was a typo on Ed's part). A couple of other things to add, battery life is amazing, I can do about 300 shots on a set of NiMH batteries with plenty of flash and nearly 100% LCD use. It's pretty fast, startup, focus/exposure, shutdown are all very good for it's class. It's white balance settings are better indoors than my 20D (handy for when I'm not near a grey card). It takes a damn good picture all things considered.
The negatives, I don't see this big fringing issue. Well let me rephrase that, I can see it if I really want to find it. It usually means taking an image and going over it with a fine tooth comb, zooming in, or taking pictures of things that will obviously show the problem, or all of the above. However, when I make a 4x6 or 5x7 print it is not an issue, even at 8x10 it's never once been an issue. Oh and I've seen the same fringing issue on high dollar SLR lenses as well, especially when you try and make it fail.
My biggest beef with the camera is the flash, it's very harsh for indoor use, even when throttled down, lots of red eye (easily fixed in PS), and I get a fair amount of vignette, having the flash fire about an inch from the center point of the lens really hurts it. I'd bet this would be a problem for any P&S that has limited flash control. Take what I'm saying with a grain of salt as I'm used to much better flash control.
It's colors are a little over-saturated, not by a huge amount and it's not a horrible problem as it makes very nice looking pictures.
http://www.theajays.com/photos/a85/index.html <- just a few random shots from my A85 and a comparative photo from my DSLR (taken minutes apart, shows the differences in colors very well).
Andrew