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Is the Leica M9 Worth the Hype?


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HYPE CHECK
Leica M9 Digital Rangefinder Camera

What it is:

The cult of Leica originated in the ’40s, when Henri Cartier-Bresson and the Magnum photographers first brought the so-called “decisive moment” into the cultural consciousness. Their startlingly immediate images of street life, war, and people are as fresh today as they were the day they were snapped. The weapon of choice for this school of photographers was the Leica rangefinder, a small, lightweight camera that offered photojournalists an easy way to capture high-quality pictures on the move. Though the film era may be waning, Leica is now producing rangefinders for the era of digital photography, and the M9 is its latest entry into the category. This $7,000 camera is for folks who are serious about their still photography; the M9 doesn’t do video.

Rangefinders work in a way fundamentally different from what we’ve come to accept as standard camera functionality. A standard viewfinder displays only what is in the frame, meaning that elements outside of lens range aren’t seen. Therefore, the shot you see in the viewfinder is the shot you get. With a rangefinder, however, you look through a viewfinder that is aligned with the lens but not connected; small marks on the glass delineate the area in frame, with space around the marks remaining visible, allowing you to look further afield when composing the shot. When you drop the shutter, there is no moment of blackness. This lets you focus on your next shot without that momentary disorientation.

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SwitchedIs the Leica M9 Worth the Hype? originally appeared on Switched on Thu, 03 Dec 2009 13:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Olympus E-P1 Is Sexy, But Is It Worth the Hype?


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What it is:
The Olympus PEN E-P1 is the company’s first Micro Four Thirds (MFT) camera — a miniaturized alternative to a digital SLR (DSLR) based on a tech standard developed in cooperation with Panasonic. The physical design and name are throwbacks to the half-frame film cameras Olympus produced from the ’50s through the ’80s. The E-P1, priced at $799, includes a 14-42-millimeter, f3.5-5.6 zoom lens (equivalent to 28-84 mm on a traditional film camera).

Why it’s different: The E-P1′s retro styling stands out among other DSLR and point-and-shoot cameras. The compact body is a result of the MFT system, which reduces bulk by forgoing an SLR’s internal mirror and prism for through-the-lens viewing. The result is a camera significantly smaller and lighter than a DSLR, but with the flexibility of interchangeable lenses and the photo quality that comes from a large image sensor. The only other MFT cameras on the market are Panasonic’s G1 and GH1, which boast similar size reductions, but have a traditional DSLR shape.

Continue reading The Olympus E-P1 Is Sexy, But Is It Worth the Hype?

SwitchedThe Olympus E-P1 Is Sexy, But Is It Worth the Hype? originally appeared on Switched on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 14:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Is the Casio EX-S12 Camera With ‘Dynamic Photo’ Worth the Hype?


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Most point-and-shoot camera makers are marching in lock step — all introducing features such as fancier face detection, higher light sensitivity, and larger LCD screens. Casio is playing along, but it’s also adding more-powerful image processing — allowing its cameras to capture photos in high-speed bursts, shoot slow-motion video, or track fast-moving subjects.

What it is: Casio’s EX-S12 (and a sister models, the EX-Z400 and EX-Z270) use this extra processing power for a new function called Dynamic Photo that lets you cut a still subject, or even a stop-motion video clip, from one shot and insert it into another.

Why it’s different: Cameras have been adding editing capabilities, such as removing red-eye but Casio is the first to put compositing — making a new image with portions of other photos — into a point-and-shoot.

Does it live up to the hype? Absolutely not. The prescribed process for creating these images with the EX-S12 is arduous, with a low success rate. And even when the tech works, the results are laughable.

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SwitchedIs the Casio EX-S12 Camera With ‘Dynamic Photo’ Worth the Hype? originally appeared on Switched on Tue, 09 Jun 2009 16:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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