I wasn't prepared to spend a lot of money on a set of "reflex cameras with a set of lenses," tote a ton of gear, and swap out lenses. If you are aware of your limitations (high ISO, L-lenses, constant quick AF, short depth of field), this may be your best option. has various benefits: Apart from. 1. The ability to quickly choose and use a variety of modes. For instance, use Fn1 to set up shooting in RAW, then press Fn2 to select the metering mode using the wheel. 2. A separate dial for exposure compensation is very useful in poor lighting. 3. Can be adjusted for shooting quite easily. 4. The capacity to use an external flash in conjunction with coordinated work. Also, you may set the shutter speed lower than the automatic machine's 1/30 setting, and the images seem to turn out (I won't say with more specificity because I didn't have time to fully test it because I temporarily rented the flash). 5. Dimensions that are sufficiently small and have a good grip. 6. They claimed that the P7000's "quick setting" causes a delay. Here, it's been fixed. 7. It's easier to use and more practical than the Canon EOS 600D! For instance, exposure bracketing, which can be done in two different methods (shutter speed and ISO), is unsightly in the 600D but useful here. 8. The video is excellent, with excellent stabilization and tracking autofocus. 9. The stabilizer performs superbly! With support from the object, one can easily move immovable objects up to 1/8 of their height. 10. Instantaneous focusing on far-off objects is possible in the light. With drawbacks: 1. Too many buttons, which you risk accidentally pressing (especially if you shoot with gloves). As a result, avoid accidentally deleting a photo by double-clicking the urn. 2. Sounds. At 400, bearable; at 800, excessive. By the way, the screen appears "pixel to pixel" at a 3x magnification, making all the intricacies visible. Scare yourself by increasing more. 4. I frequently run into blatant marketing limitations, such as slow RAW recording, numerous illogical setting restrictions, etc. 5. Macro focus does not perform well. And at night as well. 6. Native disk programs are not for people. the one that people pay for. Free converters are still unfamiliar with P7100 RAW files. In general, either use Photoshop and face the consequences, or temporarily disregard RAW.
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