For some reason, “entry-level” mirrorless cameras almost all have one thing in common: a cringe-worthy focus on selfies—the Olympus E-PL8, Panasonic GF8, and Fuji’s own X-A2 are all great examples of this. Sadly, Fujifilm has not strayed from this formula with the brand new entry-level X-A10.
First, the good. The X-A10 is now officially the cheapest X-series camera Fuji has ever released. At Just $500 with a kit lens, it’s $50 cheaper than the X-A2 before it. Those 5 Benjamins will buy you a 16.3-megapixel APS-C sensor (Bayer, not X-trans), a native ISO range of 200 – 6400 expandable to 25600, and the XC 16-50mm f/3.5-5.6 OIS II kit lens.
In other words, internally, there’s not much difference between it and last year’s X-A2.
The X-A10 tries to set itself apart by being an even better selfie camera. The screen flips 180° (instead of 175), and the grip has been designed so it’s as easy to hold forwards as backwards.
Also, once you flip the screen, the camera activates a couple of selfie specific features. Eye-Detection AF is automatically switched on in “selfie mode,” the rear dial becomes a shutter button, and the self-timer features smile detection that automatically takes the shot when it sees the subject(s) is/are smiling. There’s even a “Portrait Enhancer” mode that smoothes and brightens skin… or as the feature should have been called, “a PR nightmare waiting to happen.”
Finally, Fuji makes much of the camera’s built-in film simulation modes, six in all, as well as their “advanced skin tone reproduction capability.”
The X-A10 isn’t a major upgrade from the X-A2, but whether or not you use it for selfies, it is a cheaper way to dive into the much-adored Fujifilm ecosystem. The camera will ship in January, but you can already pre-order it here.
from PetaPixel http://petapixel.com/2016/12/02/fuji-unveils-x-a10-affordable-x-series-camera-selfie-lovers/
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