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What is it: The Panasonic Lumix DMC-G1 with interchangeable lenses and full-time live view
What we think: It is an exciting step forward in digital photography, but you might want to wait until a few more steps have been made
Panasonic Lumix DMC-G1 Review
Reviewed on: 25 November 2008
There's also a mode in which you can preview changes to settings such as aperture and shutter speed, to gauge the effects in advance. Though it's somewhat hard to see depth-of-field changes, and you can only get a general sense of the shutter speed affect because of the LCD refresh, the capability to preview exposure may be invaluable for some. You can also save three sets of custom settings. While we'd rather be able to access them directly from the mode dial instead of just the single Cust slot with menu flipping to select one, this is loads better than nothing. In addition to traditional exposure and white-balance bracketing, you can bracket three different film modes.
The gaping hole in the G1's feature set: no movie capture. Panasonic plans to introduce another model in 2009 that handles video, and for many people this may be a reason to delay buying into the whole system until then.
Performance
When it comes to performance, the G1 was full of
pleasant surprises. It goes from power on to first shot in a brisk 0.8
seconds and can focus and shoot in 0.4 seconds in high contrast
conditions and 0.6 seconds in dim, which is very good for its class.
Shot-to-shot times for both raw and JPEG settle at about 0.9 seconds,
and zippy flash recycle time adds about 0.1 seconds to that. Equipped
with a fast SD card -- at least 20MB per second -- it can shoot 2.6fps
for almost 90 JPEG frames in burst mode. With a slower card it stalls
after about six or so frames. Keep in mind, though, that the EVF
blackouts -- though relatively brief -- can stymie your attempts at
keeping the subject framed in the scene.
As with its performance, the G1 displays excellent photo quality that rivals or bests similarly priced dSLRs. The kit lens we tested with it produces sharp images across almost the entire frame, with absolutely zero fringing or bleed. While it chronically underexposes, you can readily compensate, so we didn't really ding it for that in the ratings. Its one weak point: it doesn't render exactly accurate colours, but they're within the bounds of acceptability and certainly pleasing. The same goes for its noise profile. You can shoot up to ISO 800 with confidence, and above that it does a very good job of balancing noise with sharpness -- there's no colour noise to speak of, and what there is looks more like film grain.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Time to first shot | Raw shot-to-shot time | Typical shot-to-shot time | Shutter lag (dim) | Shutter lag (typical) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Conclusion
There's quite a bit to like about the Panasonic
Lumix DMC-G1, if you accept it for what it is: an alternative to a dSLR
that can match similarly priced models in speed, photo quality, and
features, but not the shooting experience. And if you don't share our
dislike of the viewfinder -- and you should try before you buy -- then
you may find it equal even in that. However, you're also buying into a
new system that currently lacks a full selection of lenses, and
ultimately you may be better off waiting for Panasonic's next
video-supporting model or Olympus' as-yet unavailable contender.
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