| Introduction | Measurement | Comparisons | Conclusion |
Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-GF5’s offers some new tricks in a remodeled GF3 camera body. It whips up better video and audio options, and it incorporates new user features like creative control filters, and scene guide modes (provides beginning photographers with picture guides on how a professional photographer might shoot a particular scene).
The GF5 also disappoints in its sensor quality. Panasonic made no significant evolutionary changes to the GF5’s sensor, putting the Lumix DMC-GF line at risk from hungry competitors' eager to pick off prospective Panasonic customers.
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Added by photographworks |
September 27, 2012
My first comment and it's to correct grammar
"at risk from hungry competitors' eager to pickoff perspective Panasonic customers" should be 'prospective customers'
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Added by Pes Lhipchepiw |
September 28, 2012
Re: My first comment and it's to correct grammar
Should be, "My first comment, and it's to correct grammar". However, some spell checkers will still mark it as a fragment.
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Added by AaronMC |
May 16, 2012
Yay.
Yay. Yet another iteration of the same damned camera. Really pushing boundaries there, eh Panasonic?
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To provide photographers with a broader perspective about mobiles, lenses and cameras, here are links to articles, reviews, and analyses of photographic equipment produced by DxOMark, renown websites, magazines or blogs.
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The compactness, flexibility for interchange lenses, and touchscreen focus and interface makes Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-GF5 an attractive companion for amateur photographers who want the usability of a point-and-shoot, but the versatility of a DSLR. But with a number of similar hybrid cameras entering the market, is the GF5 right for you? |