Here’s Nikon’s answer to the Sony RX100 IV and RX10 II. With 4K video, 1080p at 120fps and 720p at 240fps the video spec does rival the Sony cameras. Indeed in 2016 Nikon appears to be rolling out 4K video “as standard” so far. Featuring fast lenses, compact size and likely the same stacked DRAM Sony Exmor RS 1″ sensor as the RX100 IV, the sensor size is a match for Super 16mm in cinema…
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[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/136927545[/vimeo] By now you might be wondering which to pull the trigger on – the RX10 II or RX100 IV? The good news is I have now finally got round to finishing my review of the RX10 II and have also bought the RX100 IV to compare it with…
[vimeo]https://vimeo.com/134006713[/vimeo] The slow-mo capabilities of the new Sony RX cameras are groundbreaking. I’ve been shooting at 100fps to 1000fps and everything in between. Here is everything you need to know.
The Sony RX10 M2 is our first look at Sony’s new 4K XAVC-S codec at 100Mbit/s, the same which will be on the A7R II come the end of July. The RX10 M2 also brings 1080/120fps and up to 1000fps at lower resolutions. It features an extraordinary 24-200mm Zeiss lens with constant F2.8 aperture and built in ND filter. Is this the run & gun camera you’ve been waiting for?
Sony just made another quantum leap. They have added internal 4K across the board to their new cameras, the A7R II, RX10 II and RX100 M4. There’s some exciting new technology that makes all this possible. I’ll also touch on the RX10 II’s party trick – incredible slow-mo abilities.