Posts Tagged ‘lumix’
A Special Gadget Wrap
Camera
Panasonic just keeps impressing and impressing either with sheer quality or with breakthroughs, and where the new Lumix DMC-FZ72 is concerned, it’s the latter. You see, it has a 20-1200mm (35mm equivalent) zoom! At 60x, Photography Blog says it’s “currently the longest in the industry.” With this kind of focal-length range, its aperture of F2.8 – 8.0 (W), F5.9 – 8.0 (T) shouldn’t be too surprising.
This bridge camera is a tad bigger than most and though the reviewer, Matt Grayson, says “it looks quite futuristic,” it’s not like anything out The Jetsons or Minority Report; however, it is “chunkier” than the norm with a really protruding grip.
The proof of the pudding is in the images and here the DMC-FZ72 more than holds its own. Images at sub-400 ISOs are excellent and those between ISO 400-800 are perfectly good for online viewing.
Not a great value for money, this camera claims near-top ratings in ‘Features’ and ‘Ease-of-Use.’ A good choice, perhaps, for a bird watcher who’s new to photography?
Lenses
Sometime back this month Shutterbug published quite a long article on lenes – over a dozen of them. Actually this article is a preview of new lenses that have just made or will make their debut this year. Jack Neubart covers all the major brands and every possible focal length from a 180-degree fisheye from Yasuhara Madoka to specialized lenses for astrophotography from Celestron, taking in exotica like a Rokinon Tilt-Shift lens along the way.
Most photogs will be interested in (relatively) prosaic offerings from Canon, Nikon, Tokina, and the usual suspects.
One of the highlights is Nikon’s “longest fixed focal length, FX-format AF-S lens,” an 800mm (F 5.6) monster with a teleconverter that brings the focal length up to 1000mm. The price tag is a monster that matches the lens! ‘Just folks’ photogs may be more interested in the Tamron and Sigma lenses with ‘just folks’ focal lengths and prices to match.
Gadget
iPhone camera-lovers may have a MasterCard in their wallets but what they really want is another type of charge card: the punningly-named ‘ChargeCard.’
PhotoJojo explains, with the aid of a GIF, that this is actually a USB mobile-phone-charging cable that has the size and dimensions of a charge card. The engagingly-written product page provides more details about this clever product which will ensure that you’re never stranded for juice if you’re near any USB outlet.
A ‘Tank’ of a Camera: Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-FT5
It’s always the same: no sooner has a new champion been crowned than a gaggle of young pretenders are challenging him for his title, whatever it may be. A scant month back we had blogged about TIPA crowning Pentax’s Optio WG-2 ‘The Best Rugged Camera’. The latest contender who wants to lance the WG-2 off its saddle is Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-FT5.
In his review on Pocket-lint, Mike Lowe refers to it as “the tank of compact cameras” which is “tough enough to flatten most traditional compact cameras’ specifications.” Or maybe tough enough to flatten most traditional compact cameras, full-stop?
Let’s begin, however, by examining the DMC-FT5 qua camera (rather than qua tank). It boasts 16 megapixels and that’s a big plus straight off the bat because “[e]very major manufacturer has its tough and waterproof compact camera range these days but . . . many models . . . tend to consider the key camera component as an aside to the tough concept.” Not so this Lumix which also has an able zoom with an attractive range of 28 to 128mm (36×24 equivalent).
On-board are a variety of autofocus modes and several exposure modes including a programme mode and full manual yet straightforward shutter-priority and aperture-priority have rather oddly gone M.I.A. On the positive side its performance and specs in burst mode and in shooting video are clearly a cut above other cameras in this class.
Though it is a chunky beast, the DMC-FT5 is also quite ergonomic according to Pocket-lint. It certainly looks that way with the well-labelled buttons being perfectly positioned for the right thumb to control.
So far, so good.
This Lumix’s freeze-proof and dust-proof qualities mean that you can lug it from K-2 to the Kalahari where its GPS, NFC and WiFi could prove very useful. And, if Lowe is to be believed, you can perhaps use this shock-proof kit in lieu of a tennis ball as well: “we’ve lobbed it around a fair bit without worry and every ground and surface the camera’s met hasn’t made a single dent or scratch.”
Read the full review to find out whether or not this tough-compact is your cup of tea but the gist is that its image quality is “as good as any other tough compact camera out there, which does put the FT5 in the mix as a tough cam favourite” because it has the edge in toughness and technical features.
Do we have a new champion? Let’s see what TIPA has to say about the DMC-FT5 next year. . . .