Difference between revisions of "Fujifilm X100"

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A surprise 2010 announcement from [[Fuji|Fujifilm]] became one of the most hotly-anticipated cameras of 2011. The '''FinePix X100''''s styling evokes traditional film [[rangefinder camera]]s, but at its heart it carries a 12-megapixel APS-C digital [[sensor]]. Omitting the zoom lens which most manufacturers thought obligatory, the Fuji has a fixed, semi-wide lens of [[Lens#Lens Speed|fast]] f/2.0 aperture and high quality. Most unusual is the viewfinder system, which has both straight-through optical viewing and an switchable [[EVF]] which can display either the live electronic image or supplementary shooting information.
 
A surprise 2010 announcement from [[Fuji|Fujifilm]] became one of the most hotly-anticipated cameras of 2011. The '''FinePix X100''''s styling evokes traditional film [[rangefinder camera]]s, but at its heart it carries a 12-megapixel APS-C digital [[sensor]]. Omitting the zoom lens which most manufacturers thought obligatory, the Fuji has a fixed, semi-wide lens of [[Lens#Lens Speed|fast]] f/2.0 aperture and high quality. Most unusual is the viewfinder system, which has both straight-through optical viewing and an switchable [[EVF]] which can display either the live electronic image or supplementary shooting information.
  
[[Category:Japanese digital]] [[Category:Fujifilm]]
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[[Category:Japanese digital]] [[Category:Fuji]]

Revision as of 22:11, 7 June 2011

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A surprise 2010 announcement from Fujifilm became one of the most hotly-anticipated cameras of 2011. The FinePix X100's styling evokes traditional film rangefinder cameras, but at its heart it carries a 12-megapixel APS-C digital sensor. Omitting the zoom lens which most manufacturers thought obligatory, the Fuji has a fixed, semi-wide lens of fast f/2.0 aperture and high quality. Most unusual is the viewfinder system, which has both straight-through optical viewing and an switchable EVF which can display either the live electronic image or supplementary shooting information.