This is GoPro’s $799, foldable Karma drone
We knew it was coming, but after being delayed earlier this year, GoPro has finally unveiled its Karma drone. The new quadcopter is sleek, compact and foldable, designed to fit in most any backpack. To drive home that point, CEO and Founder Nick Woodman had it on stage all along in plain sight at today’s press event. Karma also has a gaming-like controller with a built-in touchscreen for controlling the device. Additionally, living up to Woodman’s “more than just a drone” claim, Karma’s 3-axis stabilizer has a trick up its sleeve — it slides out from the drone and attaches to an included handheld “Karma Grip” so you can record smooth shots on the ground, too.
The whole bundle including a Hero5 will cost $1,099. If you prefer to get it with the new Hero5 Session, it’s $999, or bring your own camera and it’ll cost $799. During the press event today, Woodman was keen to point out that Karma was a stabilization “system” and not just a drone. The quadcopter is, of course, the heart of Karma, but the handheld grip is mountable with regular accessories, which opens the stabilization features to pretty much anything you can stick a GoPro on (though we’re fairly sure it’s not fully waterproof!).
GoPro today also revealed new Hero5 cameras, both of which feature improved internals and waterproof capabilities without a housing. Those will go on sell October 2nd, with Karma expected to hit the shelves on October 23rd.
A fleet of self-driving boats will ply Amsterdam’s canals next year
Amsterdam’s 60 miles of canals cover about a quarter of the city and have helped its citizens get around since the 17th century. While they’ve matched other trials in self-driving public transportation with their own buses, they aren’t ignoring their historic waterways. Next year, the Dutch city’s Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions (AMS) will start experimenting with an entire fleet of autonomous boats to haul people and goods while cleaning up the water.
The five-year pilot program, titled Roboat, will be carried out by researchers from MIT, Delft University of Technology (TUD) and Wageningen University and Research (WUR). Obviously, using conventionally-designed boats to transport goods and people will be a major focus. But it will also look into autonomous infrastructure, like floating stages or bridges that can be assembled and disassembled in hours.

Further, the Roboat fleet could track environmental conditions and comb the canals for waste, including the 12,000 bicycles that end up in the water every year. That extends to human waste, too, and testing it in the city’s water systems could tip officials off to outbreaks of disease or other health trends, AMS’ scientific director told The Verge.
Via: The Verge
Source: The Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions
Olympus’ PEN E-PL8 is a stylish Micro Four Thirds camera
It wasn’t too long ago that Olympus introduced its PEN-F camera, and now the company is following that up with a less expensive retro-looking model. Meet the PEN E-PL8, a Micro Four Thirds shooter with a 16.1-megapixel Live MOS sensor, a new TruePicTM VII sensor, 3-axis image stabilization and an ISO range of 100-25,600. Since it is an entry-level PEN, the E-PL8 doesn’t capture videos in 4K, although you can record 1080p at 24 and 30 fps. You also have WiFi connectivity, which will let you transfer images to a smartphone or tablet through Olympus’ mobile app.
It’ll hit stores in October for $550 body-only, or $100 for the kit with a 14-42mm lens. Not bad if you want a stylish, compact camera.
Google wants to help find your next book to read
It doesn’t matter if you’ve got the biggest or best shop in the world if you can’t connect people to the things that they want. It’s an issue that Google is hoping to address in its electronic bookstore with the launch of Discover, a new way to show people stuff they want to read. The service is designed to replace the human booksellers you used to find in Barnes & Noble, offering up recommendations and reviews for stuff you should read.
Discover will gain these insights both by analyzing your reading habits, but also by aggregating sources from across the web. You’ll also be told which titles are being praised by NPR and which ones are about to be turned into movies. As part of Discover, Google is launching Google Play Editorial, a platform where readers will find interviews with authors, articles written by their favorite scribes and recommended reading lists from their heroes.
Discover launches today as part of the Google Play Books Android app, and will be coming to iOS in the near future.
Comcast’s Netflix-on-X1 beta test starts rolling out today
It seems odd to hear, but it’s real: this week Netflix will start to become available on Comcast cable boxes across the country. Announced a couple of months ago, the partnership is rolling out slowly as a beta test, so interested Comcast customers with the X1 platform can go to the Comcast Labs section on their cable box and opt-in.
If you don’t see the app right away, don’t worry, as it will become available to more people over the next few weeks. A formal launch that will put the app in the usual X1 listing for millions of customers will come later this year, and Netflix shows and movies will appear in the video on-demand and search results too.
We haven’t exactly been hurting for ways to watch Netflix, but making it a part of the cable experience is a big move.While Netflix’s app has appeared on set-top boxes before, the possibility of Comcast opening the doors to its customers seemed unlikely, despite Reed Hasting’s positive comments about the X1 platform.

Earlier this summer Comcast used X1 boxes to stream live NBC Olympics coverage to its cable customers, and now that same infrastructure is underpinning Netflix. According to the companies, that will include support for X1 features like the voice remote, Spanish and talking guide that Comcast has rolled out recently. The voice control features have also been updated so that saying something like “Continue watching Daredevil” works correctly.
Source: Comcast
iPhone 7’s ‘Best LCD Display Ever’ Marks ‘Major Upgrade Over iPhone 6’
DisplayMate Technologies has declared iPhone 7 has the “best LCD display” it has ever tested, calling it “truly impressive” and a “major upgrade” over the iPhone 6 based on a series of advanced viewing tests and measurements.
iPhone 7 achieved the highest color accuracy, peak brightness, and contrast rating in bright light of any smartphone display, the highest contrast ratio of any IPS LCD display, and the lowest screen reflectance of any smartphone display.
Apple’s latest flagship smartphone also has image contrast and intensity described as “visually indistinguishable from perfect,” and the smallest color variation when viewing the screen at an angle of any smartphone display.
Color Accuracy and Power Efficiency
iPhone 7 has two color gamuts, including a new 26% larger DCI-P3 Wide Color Gamut, as found in 4K TVs, and a traditional, smaller sRGB / Rec.709 gamut. DisplayMate said both gamuts have been implemented with absolute color accuracy that is “visually indistinguishable from perfect,” which is “truly impressive” and a “major competitive advantage” over other smartphones.
DisplayMate said the iPhone 7 has “the most color accurate display” that it has ever measured, adding that the smartphone’s display is “very likely considerably better than any mobile display, monitor, TV, or UHD TV” that consumers have. In technical terms, the iPhone 7 has a “Just Noticeable Color Difference” (JNCD) rating of 1.1, which is the best result of any smartphone it has ever tested.
Despite having a much wider color gamut, the iPhone 7’s display is 7% more power efficient than the iPhone 6’s display.
Wide Color Gamut LCDs like the iPhone 7 instead use specially tuned Red and Green phosphors to optimally transform the light for the chosen saturated Red and Green primaries, which improves their light and power efficiency.
Brightness
The measured peak brightness for the iPhone 7 is 602 cd/m2 (nits), the highest of any smartphone DisplayMate has ever tested.
The measurement increases up to a record 705 nits when Automatic Brightness is turned on under brightly lit conditions.
On the iPhone 7 the Maximum Screen Brightness can go much higher when Automatic Brightness is turned on, so that users can’t permanently park the Manual Brightness slider to very high values, which would run down the battery quickly. High Screen Brightness is only needed for High Ambient Light, so turning Automatic Brightness On will provide better high ambient light screen visibility and also longer battery running time.
Contrast Ratio
DisplayMate said the iPhone 7 has a record-breaking contrast ratio among IPS LCD smartphone displays.
The iPhone 7 has a measured Contrast Ratio of 1,762, which is Very Good for a mobile display, and the highest we have measured for any IPS LCD display. It is also 26 percent larger than the 1,400 that Apple lists as Typical. However, Contrast Ratio is only meaningful in low ambient light, which is seldom the case for mobile displays.
iPhone 7 also has the highest contrast rating (137 to 160) in high ambient light of any smartphone.
Reflectance
DisplayMate said iPhone 7 has 4.4% screen reflectance, which is a record low among smartphones it has ever tested.
However, the iPhone 7 doesn’t come close to the record low 1.7% screen reflectance of the 9.7-inch iPad Pro, which has a special anti-reflective coating.
Unfortunately, AR coatings still can’t be used with smartphones, which have much higher abrasion and scratch issues than tablets and other touch screen displays because they are small enough to be carried in pockets and bags that have all sorts of scratchy things inside. A number of companies are working on technologies that can produce both low screen reflectance and high abrasion and scratch resistance […] but it’s challenging and also has to be cost effective. Since peak brightness can’t keep increasing due to battery power limitations and thermal issues, developing a low reflectance screen will be the key to improving display performance in high ambient light.
Viewing Angle
DisplayMate said the iPhone 7 has “excellent viewing angle performance” with no visually noticeable color shifts. The display had the smallest color variation when viewed at an angle, earning a JNCD rating of 2.1 or less.
With its Dual-Domain Pixels, the iPhone 7 Contrast Ratio remained close to 1,000 at 30 degrees for both the Portrait and Landscape modes, which is the highest we have measured for LCDs. However, all LCDs do have a strong decrease in Brightness (Luminance) with Viewing Angle, and the iPhone 7 showed (as expected) a 55 percent decrease in Brightness at a modest 30 degree Viewing Angle.
DisplayMate shared more in-depth analysis in its iPhone 7 vs. iPhone 6 display shootout.
Related Roundup: iPhone 7
Tag: DisplayMate
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Ceramic Apple Watch Paired With Milanese Loop, Classic Buckle, and More
The Apple Watch Series 2 didn’t change much visually from the original version of the device that launched in 2015, but Apple did introduce one new version of Series 2 that could be immediately distinguished from earlier iterations: the Ceramic Apple Watch Edition. The Ceramic model comes packed in with a Magnetic Apple Watch Charging Dock and a Cloud Sport Band, so many users were curious about what the color would look like with other Apple bands, and one Redditor has posted an extensive collection of photos to showcase just that.
Sold for $1,250 (38mm) and $1,300 (42mm), the high-end model of Series 2 is definitely expensive, but still far below the first generation’s $10,000+ “Edition” models that were made in pure gold. In vvedge’s Imgur album, the Ceramic Edition is paired with a few Woven Nylon bands, including Gold/Red, Gold/Blue, Yellow/Light Gray, Space Orange/Anthracite, and Black.

Higher-priced bands also got paired with Ceramic, in a variety of colors. Vvedge showed off the Space Black and Silver Link Bracelet, the Space Black and Silver Milanese Loop, and the Marine Blue and Saddle Brown Classic Buckle. Because the silver aluminum of the lugs and bands are visually in opposition to Ceramic’s smooth white surface, some users might not like the look of the more costly bands paired with Ceramic.

The Stone and Storm Gray Leather Loop pair better with the device, as do a few of the basic Sport Bands Apple offers. Sport Bands in White, Black, Turquoise, Light Pink, Midnight Blue, Lavender, and Red are all displayed in the album. Apple’s intended paired band with Ceramic — dubbed “Cloud” — caps vvedge’s image collection, and remains the only Sport Band with matching white pin.
Apart from the Ceramic Edition, Apple introduced a number of new collections for the Apple Watch Series 2 and Series 1, as well as a few new colors of the Sport Bands, Woven Nylon, and Classic Buckle. Most users began receiving their Series 2 models on Friday, but a few late pre-order customers still have a few weeks to wait until their Apple Watch comes in the mail.
Check out vvedge’s full Imgur album to see all of the Ceramic Apple Watch Edition band combos.
Related Roundups: Apple Watch Series 2, watchOS 3
Buyer’s Guide: Apple Watch (Buy Now)
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Panasonic Lumix FZ2500 and Lumix FZ2000 Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET
Panasonic’s Lumix FZ1000 is the camera I recommend the most to those considering a digital SLR for photography, but who aren’t in love with the idea of buying and lugging around lenses. The new $1,200 Lumix FZ2500 arriving in December goes beyond that, eliminating the need for a high-performance camcorder, too.
According to Panasonic, the FZ2500 is essentially the company’s GH4 interchangeable lens camera — a model popular with moviemakers — but with a fixed zoom lens. In this case, a 20x f2.8-4.5 24-480 lens with an inner zoom structure for reducing image shift when zooming. Ever noticed a little jump in your video when zooming in and out with another camera? That’s what this system is suppressing.
Panasonic
The camera does not have a Micro Four Third sensor like the GH4 either, but the FZ2500’s 1-inch 20-megapixel sensor is still big. If the performance is anything like the FZ1000’s 1-inch sensor, you can expect better color, detailed dynamic range and low-light performance for photos and video than a typical camcorder or point-and-shoot.
So, how exactly is it like the GH4 then? Well, it’s all in capabilities:
- Record in 4K (4,096×2,160) or Quad HD (3,840×2,160) resolutions at 24fps or 30fps, respectively, in MOV or MP4
- Record in full HD (1,920×1,080) at 200Mbps or 100 Mbps in MOV, MP4, AVCHD progressive and AVCHD
- User selectable system frequency between 59.94Hz (23.98Hz), 50.00Hz or 24.00Hz
- Live output via micro-HDMI in 4:2:2/8-bit while recording to a SDXC card at 4:2:0/8-bit
- Live output via micro-HDMI in 4:2:2/10-bit for saving HDMI output to external storage
- V-Log/V-Log L support (paid software upgrade required)
- Full HD variable frame rate control for speeding up and slowing down the look of your video on the fly
- No limit on continuous recording (US only)
Design features like its 3.5mm mic and headphone jacks, a hot shoe, zoom and focus rings on the lens barrel, an SD card slot on the side for quick swaps when it’s on a tripod, front and rear control dials and a high-res 3-inch flip-out rear touchscreen that tilts up and down by 270 degrees only add to its flexibility as a movie-making machine.
The design is great for photography, too, including a large, high-magnification OLED viewfinder; built-in ND filters — -2EV(1/4), -4EV(1/16), -6EV(1/64) and AUTO – selectable with a switch on the lens barrel; built-in Wi-Fi for remote control and a nine-blade aperture for smooth-looking out-of-focus areas.
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The camera has fast performance in general, with a full-resolution burst mode of 12fps with fixed focus or 7fps with continuous autofocus for up to 100 JPEGs or 30 raw images at a time.
Like Panasonic’s other high-end compacts, the FZ2500 can use its 4K video capabilities to fire off 8-megapixel pictures at a blazing fast rate of 30 per second, grabbing moments you might otherwise miss. Another mode takes a burst of photos with different focus points and lets you select the area you want in focus after you shoot. Fans of close-up macro shots will appreciate the Focus Stacking mode, so you can decide how much of the shot is in focus.
If you were looking for a (slightly) less expensive competitor to Sony’s Cyber-shot RX10 III, this is it.
Panasonic Lumix G85 and Lumix G80 Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET
Panasonic takes its Lumix G7 mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera upstream — literally — with the Lumix G85, an updated and more rugged version of a combination of a slightly redesigned G7 body with the internals of the GX85/GX80, intended to appeal to the outdoor photographer. In addition to incorporating the antialiasing-filter-free sensor and image processor and stabilization system from the GX85, the G85 improves on the G7 body with dust-and-splash resistance and the ability to take a battery grip. Plus it adds some more advanced video capabilities and improved image stabilization.
The camera will ship in October with a body-only price of $900 and a $1,000 kit with the 12-60mm f3.5-5.6 lens announced in February 2016. I don’t have non-US pricing or availability yet, but those directly convert to roughly £690/£770 and AU$1,200/AU$1,335. In the UK the name will be the G80.
Panasonic ruggedizes the G7 body for the…
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What’s new
- Design. In addition to the weather sealing and support for a battery grip (DMW-BGG1), Panasonic tweaked the design for improved usability. The SD card slot is now on the grip, where it belongs, and it adds electronic first-curtain shutter (EFCS) for decreased shutter vibration. It also has a magnesium front panel for increased rigidity which decreases vibration, as well. And the viewfinder has slightly more magnification.
- Performance. Panasonic incorporated a new gyro in the body to beef up its 5-axis hybrid image-stabilization system, dubbed “Dual IS 2.” While the continuous-shooting frame rate with autofocus remains essentially unchanged, it’s got a deeper buffer for a decent number of raw shots.
- Video. While the camera has the usual Panasonic 4K video-enabled features such as focus stacking and Live Crop, it also gains clean HDMI out (4:2:2), monochrome preview and the ability to fiddle with the luma value. In the US, you can shoot a single 4K video clip for up to 45 minutes rather than being forced to cut off at 29:59 (which is an artifact of European regulations). However, it lacks support for V-Log profiles.
My take
I tend to like Panasonic’s cameras because of the balance of speed, size, features and photo quality, and the G85/G80 combines the best of both worlds from its latest mirrorless models. Olympus’ OM-D models, probably the E-M5 Mark II, are its closest competitors, but the EM5M2 is two years old and needs a general update to bring it into 2016.
Comparative specs
| Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark II | Panasonic Lumix DMC-G7 | Panasonic Lumix DMC-G85DMC-G80 (UK) | Pansonic Lumix DMC-GX85DMC-GX80 (UK) |
| 16.1MP Live MOS | 16MP Live MOS | 16MP Live MOS | 16MP Live MOS |
| 17.3 x 13mm | 17.3 x 13mm | 17.3mm x 13mm | 17.3mm x 13mm |
| 2.0x | 2.0x | 2.0x | 2.0x |
| Yes | Yes | No | No |
| ISO 100 (exp)/ISO 200 – ISO 25600 | ISO 100 (exp)/ISO 200 – ISO 25600 | ISO 100 (exp)/ISO 200 – ISO 25600 | ISO 100 (exp)/ISO 200 – ISO 25600 |
| 5fpsunlimited JPEG and raw(10fps with fixed focus and IS off) | 6fps 100 JPEG/13 raw(8fps with focus fixed on first frame; 40fps with electronic shutter) | 6fps300 JPEG/45 raw(9fps with focus and exposure fixed on first frame) | 6fpsat least 100 JPEG/13 raw(10fps with electronic shutter and focus fixed on the first frame) |
| EVF100% coverage2.36 million dots1.3x – 1.48x/ 0.65x – 0.74x | OLED EVF100% coverage2.36m dots1.4x/0.7x | OLED EVF100% coverage2.36m dots1.5x/0.74x | EVF100% coverage2.8m dots1.4x/0.7x |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 81-area Contrast AF | 49-area DFD Contrast AF | 49-area DFD Contrast AF | 49-area DFD Contrast AF |
| n/a | -4 – 18 EV | -4 – 18 EV | -4 – 18 EV |
| 60 – 1/8000 sec; bulb to 30 minutes; 1/250 sec x-sync (Super FP to 1/8000) | 1/4000 to 60 secs (up to 1/16000 with electronic shutter); bulb to 2 minutes; 1/160 sec x-sync | 1/4000 to 60 secs (up to 1/16000 with electronic shutter); bulb to 2 minutes; 1/160 sec x-sync | 60 -1/4000 sec; max 1/16000 sec with electronic shutter; 1/160 sec x-sync; bulb to 2 minutes |
| n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| 324 area | 1,728 zone | 1,728 zone | 1,728 zone |
| -2 – 20 EV | 0 – 18 EV | 0 – 18 EV | 0 – 18 EV |
| H.264 QuickTime MOV1080/60p, 50p (52 Mbps); 30p, 25p, 24p (77 Mbps) | H.264 QuickTime MOVUHD/30p, 25p, 24p @ 100Mbps; 1080/60p, 50p, 25p, 24p @ 28Mbps | H.264 QuickTime MOV4K UHD/30p, 25p, 24p @ 100Mbps; 1080/60p, 50p, 25p, 24p @ 200Mbps | H.264 QuickTime MOV4K UHD/30p, 25p, 24p @ 100Mbps; 1080/60p, 50p, 25p, 24p @ 200Mbps |
| Stereo; mic input; headphone jack on HLD-8G grip | Stereo; mic input | Stereo; mic input | Stereo |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 4GB | 29:59 mins | 45 mins(in US only)29:59 elsewhere | 4GB/29:59 minutes |
| Yes | n/a | Yes | n/a |
| Sensor shift 5 axis | Optical | Sensor shift Dual IS 25 axis | Sensor shift Dual IS5 axis |
| 3 in/7.5cmArticulated touchscreen1.04m dots | 3 in/7.5cmArticulated touchscreen1.04m dots | 3 in/7.5cmArticulated touchscreen1.04m dots | 3-inch/7.5 cmTilting touchscreen1.04 million dots |
| 1 x SDXC | 1 x SDXC | 1 x SDXC | 1 x SDXC |
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi |
| Included add-on | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| 310 shots(1,220 mAh) | 360 shots(1,200mAh) | 330 shots (LCD); 320 shots (VF)(1,200 mAh) | 290 shots (LCD); 270 shots (EVF)(1,025 mAh) |
| 4.9 x 3.3 x 1.8 in124 x 85 x 45 mm | 4.9 x 3.4 x 3.1 in124.9 x 86.2 x 77.4 mm | 5.1 x 3.5 x 2.9 in 128 x 89 x 74 mm | 4.8 x 2.8 x 1.7 in122 x 71 x 44 mm |
| 15.7 oz446 g | 14.7 oz418 g | 17.1 oz (est.)505 g (est.) | 15.3 oz434 g |
| $1,100(body only)£950(with 14-42mm PZ lens)AU$1,400 (est.)(with 14-42mm lens) | £550(with 12-60mm lens)$700AU$900(with 14-42mm lens) | $1,000(with 12-60mm lens) | $800£600AU$1,200(with 12-32mm lens) |
| February 2015 | June 2015 | October 2016 | May 2016 |
Panasonic Lumix LX10 and Lumix LX15 Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET
Panasonic
Adding to its enthusiast compact line, Panasonic’s Lumix LX10 is a somewhat confusing entry between the more consumer-targeted Lumix ZS100 and the similarly priced Lumix LX100. Panasonic sees the LX10 as the successor to the four-year-old LX7, but when the LX7 shipped there were no competing enthusiast compacts in Panasonic’s line with its fast lens and large (at the time) 1/1.7-inch sensor. (It does enable Panasonic to somewhat disingenuously proclaim “The 1-inch sensor is 3 times larger than the LX7’s 1/1.7-inch sensor” rather than saying it’s the same size as the sensor in almost every enthusiast compact these days.) The LX10 combines the 20.1-megapixel 1-inch sensor of the ZS100 with a fast but short-zoom lens like the LX100, which has a larger but lower-resolution 12-megapixel Four Thirds-size sensor.
Panasonic plans to ship the LX10 in November for $700; I don’t have price or availability for other regions, but it converts to approximately £540 and AU$935.

Relative sensor sizes.
Lori Grunin/CNET
What’s notable
- Design: Panasonic’s main design goal with this model was pocketability. Though it is smaller than the LX100, it’s not by a lot: The company shaved off 0.5 in/7mm or less in every dimension, putting it at the same size as the Canon PowerShot G7 X Mark II but still larger than the competing Sony RX100 II — which has a viewfinder and is about the largest size that will fit in a jeans pocket. The LX100 fits in a loose pants pocket. And it’s only fractionally smaller than the ZS100, which has a 10x zoom lens. It looks very much like the ZS100, but swaps the programmable ring on the lens for an aperture ring. And unlike the other two Panasonic models, it has a flip-up display for selfies.
- Lens: The camera’s 3x 24-72mm f1.4-2.8 lens does have the fastest maximum aperture in its class, but only by a bit less than 2/3 of a stop. And unfortunately, it lacks a built-in neutral density filter, which makes it difficult to shoot at slow shutter speeds at wide apertures in sunlight. It does have a 9-blade diaphragm for round out-of-focus highlights. It can focus as close as 1.2 in/3 cm, which is one of the closest in its class. And it incorporates Panasonic’s 5-axis hybrid sensor shift/optical image-stabilization system.
- Performance: It incorporates the company’s DFD (depth from defocus) contrast autofocus system, which is quite fast. That will likely give it an edge over competitors, since AF in these cameras tends to be a bit slow. However, the battery life is rated at only 260 shots thanks to the tiny, low-power battery.
- Features: All the standard Panasonic-specific features come in the LX10. They include 4K video with 4K burst, 4K photo, 4K Live Crop (which produces an HD video from a window panning around a 4K video), Post Focus and Focus Stacking modes. A new capability is Light Composition, a post-capture process which combines frames of a 4K video into the equivalent of a long-exposure still frame.
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My take
The LX10 sounds like a nice camera, as long as you’re okay without a hot shoe or a viewfinder, and are willing to trade higher resolution for the photo quality of the LX100 or a fast lens for a long zoom on the less-expensive ZS100. I suspect it will be a confusing decision among those models for a lot of people.
With the exception of the longer lens on the G7 X Mark II, the LX10 seems like it has a lot of advantages in comparison, and it has the potential to give the more expensive Sony RX100 IV some serious competition.
And while it’s certainly an improved option over the LX7 — which you’d expect after so long — you do lose the multi-aspect sensor, which produces images with the same resolution regardless of the aspect ratio you choose.
Comparative specs
| Canon PowerShot G7 X | Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX10 | Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX100 | Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 II |
| 20.2MP HS CMOS | 20.1MP MOS | 12.8MP MOS | 20.2MP Exmor R CMOS |
| 1-inch(13.2 x 8.8 mm) | 1-inch(13.2 x 8.8) | Four Thirds(17.3 x 13mm) | 1-inch(13.2 x 8.8mm) |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| ISO 100 – ISO 12800/25600 (exp) | ISO 80 (exp)/ISO 125 – ISO 12800/ISO 25600 (exp) | ISO 100 (exp)/ISO 200 – ISO 25600 | ISO 100 (exp)/ISO 160 – ISO 12800 |
| 24-100mmf1.8-2.84.2x | 24-72mmf1.4-2.83x | 24 – 75mmf1.7-2.83.1x | 28 – 100mmf1.8-4.9 3.6x |
| 2.0 in/5 cm | 1.2 in/3 cm | 2 in/5 cm | 1.9 in/5 cm |
| 4.4fps31 JPEG/n/a raw(6.5fps with focus and exposure fixed on first frame) | 6fpsn/a(50fps with electronic shutter and fixed AF/AE) | 6.5fpsn/a(40fps with electronic shutter and fixed AF/AE) | 2.5fps(10fps with fixed exposure)12 JPEG/13 raw |
| None | None | EVF0.4 in/10 mm2.764m dots100% coverage1.39x/0.7x | Optional OLED EVFTilting 0.5-inch/13 mm2.36m dots100 percent coverage |
| No | No | Yes | Yes |
| 31-areaContrast AF | 49-areaContrast AF | 49-areaContrast AF | 25-area Contrast AF |
| 250 – 1/2,000 sec | 60 – 1/4,000 sec (1/16,000 electronic shutter); bulb to 2 minutes | 60 – 1/4,000 sec (1/16,000 electronic shutter); bulb to 2 minutes | 30 – 1/2,000 sec; bulb |
| n/a | n/a | 1,728 zones | n/a |
| H.264 QuickTime MOV1080/60p | MP4 UHD/30p, 24p @ 100Mbps; 1080/60p, 50p | MP4 UHD/30p, 25p, 24p @ 100Mbps; 1080/60p, 50p | AVCHD1080/60p, 50p, 25p,24p |
| Stereo | Stereo | Stereo | Stereo |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 4GB/29:59 minutes | 15 minutes | 15 minutes | 29 minutes |
| Yes | n/a | Yes | Yes |
| Optical | Optical5-axis hybrid | Optical | Optical |
| 3 in/7.5 cmFlip-up touchscreen 1.04m dots | 3 in/7.5 cmTilting touchscreen 1.04m dots | 3 in/7.5 cmFixed921,000 dots | 3 in/7.5cmTilting921,600 dots(plus another set of white dots for brightness) |
| 1 x SDXC | 1 x SDXC | 1 x SDXC | 1 x SDXC |
| Wi-Fi, NFC | Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi, NFC | Wi-Fi, NFC |
| Yes | Yes | Bundled optional | Yes |
| No | No | No | No |
| 210 shots(1,250 mAh) | 260 shots(680 mAh) | 300 shots(1,025 mAh) | 350 shots(1,240 mAh) |
| 4.1 x 2.4 x 1.6 in103 x 60 x 40 mm | 4.2 x 2.4 x 1.7 in106 x 60 x 42 mm | 4.5 x 2.6 x 2.2 in 115 x 66 x 55 mm | 4.0 x 2.3 x 1.5 inches101.6 x 58.1 x 38.3 mm |
| 10.7 oz302 g | 10.9 (est.)310 g (est.) | 13.9 oz394 g | 9.9 oz280.7 g |
| $650£390 (est.) | $700 | $700£530AU$1,000 | $650£630AU$900 |
| October 2014 | November 2016 | November 2014 | July 2013 |



