This Camera is real value for money, I personally think it the best value mirror-less out there, with reasonable priced lenses which are also smaller than their aps-c counterparts.
Compact
Battery life
This Camera is real value for money, I personally think it the best value mirror-less out there, with reasonable priced lenses which are also smaller than their aps-c counterparts.
Compact
Battery life
As a fan of 5-axis stabilisation, I was curious to put it to test against the new E-M10 stabilisation which only has three axes. The million dollar question is: can two missing axes really make a big difference when shooting at slow shutter speeds
The E-M10 Mark III offers casual shooters a modern camera with a classic design.
Decent 16MP images; Five-axis internal stabilization; Compact; lightweight; Built-in EVF
Same sensor as E-M10 Mark II; Autofocus isn't great for moving subjects; Image quality lags behind APS-C peers
I used an OM-1 35mm camera and Zuiko lenses for many years. In the modern era I have used DSLRs. After reading reviews in the photomags about micro four thirds system and Olympus version in particular, I was really hankering to try it out. I bought an OM-D E-M10 and two kit lenses.
Last the same as the OEM battery plus the charger is able to charge both oem and the batteries included therefore I only bring this and just kept the Olympus charger at home.
Olympus' followup to its excellent OM-D E-M10 Mark II, a mirrorless model for newbies who want a viewfinder, is more of a Mark II-plus than a Mark III. There are a few tweaks to the design and a new effects filter, but the biggest change is the updated interface for beginners -- intended to be easier to use than the old supposedly easier-to-use interface.
The update to the Mark II has some design tweaks, but the biggest change is a move away from its odd "easy" operating mode.
The OM-D E-M10 III isn't a big update in terms of specs, but Olympus has made some pretty significant attempts to make it easier to make full use of its capabilities. We liked its predecessor, and we think the updates to the interface, the addition of 4K and the improved AF Tracking all add...
Increasingly keen beginner photographers
Sports shooters or anyone demanding dependable autofocus
The E-M10 III is an attractive camera that does a good job of making its range of capabilities accessible. It's flexible and enjoyable and relatively easy to shoot good 4K video with. Its unreliable focus tracking and modest resolution take a little gloss off a camera that gives plenty of room to grow into.
Increasingly keen beginner photographers;
Sports shooters or anyone demanding dependable autofocus;
Our favourite travel camera gets 4K video and more...
Now with 4K video; 5-axis in-camera stabilisation; Powerful features in a small body
No 20MP sensor yet; Harsh JPEG sharpening; Small changes over Mark II
The just-released Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III camera is a small but significant upgrade to the E-M10 Mark II , which we reviewed two years ago. While it retains the 16-megapixel resolution of its predecessors, its TruePic VIII processor and support of fast SD cards enables 4K movie recording plus...
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