zwarte_kat
Well-known
This is going to be an oddball, but very interesting:
http://www.blackmagicdesign.com/products/blackmagicpocketcinemacamera
In short:
About as big as a Sony Nex, but with Micro 4/3 mount.
Sensor is even smaller than MF 4/3. Like 1.4 times smaller. Crop is 3.0 compared with full frame.
It's a video camera that shoots in HD, but it can shoot at 30FPS, In Raw DNG images.
HQ sound, though you'd need to connect a pre-amp plus decent mic.
13 stops of dynamic range, which is incredible for the size and price point.
So it's very low res, it doesn't do that well in low light, no autofocus, and no still function (there is Time lapse). But you can export a still from a video that is pixel for pixel probably comparable to an M9 (no AI filter either).
If you shoot just for the web, this camera can provide videos and stills at the same time, without compromises in quality. It's $999.
I know most here will not be interested, but it is interesting to see where cameras are going. The announced bigger brother camera of this one can shoot at 4000 pixels wide. I believe that is between 12 and 16MP. It has a sensor at about APS-C size, and will cost $4000, still half of an M9P costs.
I have Blackmagic's current 2.5K cinema camera. The DNG files can be opened in lightroom and edited as any other Raw photograph. It is big and heavy though.
http://www.blackmagicdesign.com/products/blackmagicpocketcinemacamera
In short:
About as big as a Sony Nex, but with Micro 4/3 mount.
Sensor is even smaller than MF 4/3. Like 1.4 times smaller. Crop is 3.0 compared with full frame.
It's a video camera that shoots in HD, but it can shoot at 30FPS, In Raw DNG images.
HQ sound, though you'd need to connect a pre-amp plus decent mic.
13 stops of dynamic range, which is incredible for the size and price point.
So it's very low res, it doesn't do that well in low light, no autofocus, and no still function (there is Time lapse). But you can export a still from a video that is pixel for pixel probably comparable to an M9 (no AI filter either).
If you shoot just for the web, this camera can provide videos and stills at the same time, without compromises in quality. It's $999.
I know most here will not be interested, but it is interesting to see where cameras are going. The announced bigger brother camera of this one can shoot at 4000 pixels wide. I believe that is between 12 and 16MP. It has a sensor at about APS-C size, and will cost $4000, still half of an M9P costs.
I have Blackmagic's current 2.5K cinema camera. The DNG files can be opened in lightroom and edited as any other Raw photograph. It is big and heavy though.