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Fujifilm X10 12 MP EXR CMOS Digital Camera with f2.0-f2.8 4x Optical Zoom Lens and 2.8-Inch LCD
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Fujifilm X10 12 MP EXR CMOS Digital Camera with f2.0-f2.8 4x Optical Zoom Lens and 2.8-Inch LCD
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Customer Review :
Fujifilm Converted This Long-Time Canon devotee : Fujifilm X10 12 MP EXR CMOS Digital Camera with f2.0-f2.8 4x Optical Zoom Lens and 2.8-Inch LCD
Two years ago, I upgraded from a Canon Sd1000 to a Canon S90. The image capability was astonishing with great high Iso performance and sharp images, even wide-open in the corners. Other aspects of the camera bothered me though. It didn't feel high-priced - the front operate ring was loose and felt cheap when I used it to change aperture, the flash often jammed even when I'd never pushed it down or interfered with its motorized action, the buttons felt cheap, the Lcd industrialized stuck pixels quickly and had an uneven backlight. This year, I felt I needed something new. Thanks to the popularity of the S90, even on the used market, I was able to recover about half what I paid for it new.
Enter the Fujifilm X10.
Build capability & Size:
The best build capability I've seen in a compact, ever. Speaking as person who cares maybe a bit too much about aesthetics, I'm in heaven. Magnesium and aluminum everywhere. The dials are tight and the zoom ring has a lovely heavy, fluid action. It's plainly a joy to use. It destroys the PowerShot S90. The viewfinder is challenging and big for a contract but it's total lack of shooting data makes using it more of a novelty under all but the most predictable conditions. Size-wise, the X10 is a bit smaller than expected. holding it was initially awkward with the neck strap lug attachment in the way of my right hand but I'm starting to adjust to it. More than anything, I'll miss the pocketability of the S90. Even with its case I could slip it into my jeans pocket. The X10, with it's protruding lens, will never fit in any of my pockets. I'm awaiting the Fujifilm Lc-X10 case to come down in price to sane levels before picking one up.
Image Quality:
The first thing that struck me about the X10's images was the color. Compared to the S90 and other compacts I've used, the colors are more realistic, more lifelike, less harsh and digital. They look like my Canon 30D Dslr's images more than anything. Fujifilm cameras have long been known for their lifelike color pregnancy and the X10 has it in full force.
Dynamic range, even without using the Exr "Dr" sensor-split expansion mode, is very good. Using Dr400 at 6 Mp gives it approximately an Hdr quality, but more realistic. Highlights are generally well-controlled although a phenomenon can occur at low Isos with challenging highlights like chrome: circular, hard-edged white orbs. I've seen these on a handful of shots and once you see them, you can't "unsee" them. I unquestionably hope Fujifilm can fix this with a firmware update. My S90 never had this issue, in fact, I loved using it to take 15 second night shots at Iso 80. Fujifilm has to address this. In my opinion, its the biggest flaw of the camera.
High Isos are very good. Things fell apart for my S90 above Iso 800. The X10 holds strong up to and including Iso 3200. More information is retained and noise is finely-grained, not the jaundiced yellow blotches the S90 produced at Iso 1600 and 3200. I'd like to use Raw but Adobe needs to update Acr to identify X10 Raw files first.
Resolution is good but not appreciably best than the 10Mp S90, particularly at low Isos. The lens seems to be sharp in the corners, even wide open. There is some barrel distortion at 28mm but nothing too bad. The f/2-f/2.8 lens allows for much more depth-of-field operate than what was inherent with the S90. Will it replace my 30D and 60mm f/2.8 lens for portraits? Not quite, but it's darned good for a compact.
My popular "special feature" is the 360� Panorama mode. It works surprisingly well. The only caveat is the vertical resolution is an unimpressive 1080 pixels.
Speaking of 1080 - the 1080p, 30 Fps video is pretty good. Autofocus and zooming are gift and accounted for, unlike the S90. There is some of the dreaded Cmos "jellyvision" going on but only in positive circumstances.
Wrap-Up:
I'm sure you can tell that I unquestionably like this camera. Canon lost me with the S100, which I was eagerly waiting for - too much of a priority on compactness and lens range at the price of operate and image quality. Fujifilm built the X10 for photographers and its evident in how it looks, feels and operates. One thing to think about is this: Unlike Canon, Fujifilm doesn't have a low-end Dslr market to compete against. They went all-out with the X10 since that price bracket is totally empty for them. If you don't mind the relative bulk or price and you value a real "photographer's camera", the X10 is for you.