"Real photographers" [tm] would die rather than use a pop up flash. They'd rather have a large piece of extra equipment on top of or remotely linked  to the camera at all times to allow variation in lighting level, multi axis bounce, HSS features, diffuser and reflector  options, power variation, exposure method control (ADI, TTL, ...) and more.

BUT

Personally, I find having a pop-up flash IMMENSELY useful and valuable.   
 By all means make every effort to have a better alternative available, but the popup flash certainly has its place.

Your conditions list is tighter than reality would usually dictate is necessary - it will usually be possible to alter power and it will usually be possible to use some sort of ad-hoc reflector or diffuser OR to carry a small commercial or premade home-built unit. But, even with your limitations, it still has its place.

At the end I've added links to a number of sites carrying DIY and commercial diffusers for popup flashes. Out of these ideas it should be possible to formulate a design that you can whip up almost anywhere if needed. A4 copier paper is often available and liable to be useful. River mud and papyrus may pose more of a challenge.


If necessary you can use a sheet of paper or a (clean ideally) handerkerchief to diffuse light. You can make a foldable light reflector which fits in a shirt pocket and provides a wide area of reduced intensity illumination.  

A small "pocket mirror" will allow very flexible flash bouncing even when hand held. - I've just been photographing object in my kitchen using a hand held mirror and was agreeably surprised by the results - bounce flash. Note to self - add small mirror to 'ready-action' bag - probably a metal one.  

 **But often enough the flash as-it-comes is useful.**  
  You say flash power cannot be varied - which would be a rare situation as most systems offer flash/ambient balance and or manual flash control in-camera.   
 But even if this really isn't available, you can control the effect of flash by varying distance - a subject illuminated by eg sunlight will maintain essentially constant illuminance (and illumination) as you vary distance to subject but the flash effect will diminish with the inverse of distance squared.   
 So standing twice as far away and zooming in to compensate will drop flash effect by a factor of 4. 

Shadow fill on faces in unavoidable sunlit conditions immensely improves impromptu  portraits. If you cant move the sun or the landscape then shadow filling the faces can be an excellent 3rd choice. 

I tend towards what is termed "street photography" in the course of everyday life. Th camera usually mounts a wide range walk-around lens, and a 50 mm and 500mm are my near constant companions. As is a 56 guide number tilt and swivel flash with "high speed sync" (allows high shutter speed sync) ... . I avoid using flash if at all possible - but if I do need it most of the time I'll use the popup while the "real flash" stays on my hip. Wedding / function / party - the 'real' flash gets most use, but even there the popup can be useful.

A point worth noting - flash cycle time of an external time may increase as battery life drops, sometimes quite suddenly. If you are in a situation requiring multiple flashes without too high a guide number you may occasionally get caught out (bad planning but it can happen). Reverting to the internal flash can save the day - and for me at least a camera battery is much faster to change than a set of flash batteries. A fully charged camera battery makes the popup flash about as responsive in cycle time as my external flashes - especially if their batteries are low. 


  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/yLsCi.jpg

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**Some DIY and commercial popup flash light modifiers:**




[Here is a nice discussion that looks at pros and cons ](http://www.photographic.com/issue-8-flash-photography/1010popup/).

[Here's a use for olde world white 35mm film containers](http://photo.net/photography-lighting-equipment-techniques-forum/00JDS8) as flash diffusers BUT you could do similarly with paper. (Such containers may by now be filed away with the hens' teeth. 

![enter image description here][1] 


[Here's a DIY model using vacuum bag material - but you could do similar on the fly wity many materials and a paper clip of few](http://www.diyphotography.net/diy-built-in-pop-up-flash-diffuser). With and without examples given. 

[Some more variants](http://www.elan-designs.com/blog/archives/tag/flash) some very ugly :-)

Bounce flash accessory. You could DIY with a cosmetic mirror :-) [Your popup flash doesn’t have to suck](http://terrywhite.com/techblog/your-popup-flash-doesnt-have-to-suck/)

[And more](http://thedigitalphotocoach.com/blog/2011/06/01/soft-light-from-on-camera-flash/)

[Gary Fong add on](http://www.digitalcamerawarehouse.com.au/prod7284.htm) looks good but too dear.

[Singapore site - many versions for external and popup flash.](http://store.tagotech.com/index.php?cPath=21_33)  Some good prices. 

[Looks wierd - has some bounce component - may even work. Or not.](http://www.fotodiox.com/product_info.php?products_id=1416)