Panasonic GH5II review by Dpreview: “one of the strongest options for 4K shooting under $3000”

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GH5II at BHphoto, Adorama, Amazon. Calumet DE, Park Uk.

Dpreview published the full GH5II review and concluded:

The GH5 II adds a fewer feature enhancements to one of the strongest stills/video cameras on the market. Autofocus is improved but is still a weak point for 24p video capture, taking the gloss of what’s otherwise a superlative video camera. Excellent image stabilization and a broad range of video support tools still make it one of the strongest options for 4K shooting under $3000.

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You can slide through some of the features of the new Luminar NEO

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As you know Sklylum launched this new offer: Buy the current Luminar AI (Click here) at the best price ever and you will get the new Luminar NEO once it’s released in Winter!

If you haven’t noticed it you can “virtually” play with some of the features using these sliders on this special website. I have been told more such virtual sliders will be made available soon to show off other new features.

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(FT3) rumor has it the new OM Digital “wow” camera will have this new feature: A new global shutter sensor?

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E-M1X vs E-M1III via camerasize

OM Digital promised to launch a new camera with “WOW” factor in early 2022. And one of the big news should be the new sensor. A source told me:

new flagship camera (OM 1D) will be announced in early 2022 but it will be teased in autumn this year already;
– the camera will have global shutter;

What we know so far about the OM Digital WOW camera:

  • It’s a Micro Four Third camera
  • To be teased in fall 2021 with launch in early 2022
  • It might have a new global shutter sensor
  • It has the size of a E-M1III body and it’s not an E-M1X alike camera.
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Olympus 12-45mm f/4 PRO review by Opticallimits: “very high performance in a very small package”

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Olympus 12-45mm PRO at Amazon, Adorama, BHphoto, GetOlympus.

Opticallimits tested the lens and concluded:

The Olympus M.Zuiko ED 12-45mm f/4 PRO offers very high performance in a very small package. In terms of sharpness, it doesn’t show any major weakness across the zoom range. If anything the borders/corners could do with a bit more bite at the 12mm. Micro-Four-Thirds is auto-correcting most of the other technical image aspects. Thus there’s just a hint of barrel distortion at the wide and the vignetting is quite moderate. When looking under the hood, the distortions are extreme at the 12mm setting though. Lateral CAs are low and nothing to worry about. The quality of the bokeh is generally Ok within the limited capabilities of the slow max aperture at least.

Despite being tiny, the lens remains true to its “PRO” designation. It features a tightly assembled, weather-sealed, metal body and smooth control rings. The AF is both quick and noiseless.

The Olympus M.Zuiko ED 12-45mm f/4 PRO is certainly not a lens for everyone. The rather slow max aperture was subject to quite some debates at the time the lens was announced. While it is a limiting factor for some use-cases, you have to keep in mind that Olympus had different design objectives here. If you want more speed, just go for the ED 12-40mm f/2.8 PRO. However, if you want maximum portability, the ED 12-45mm f/4 PRO has its merits – especially when combined with one of the smaller Olympus cameras like the E-M5 III. Especially outdoor enthusiasts may appreciate such a package.

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