Como de esta maquinita, la Fuji X70, ya sabemos muchas cosas y hemos hablado mucho de ella aquí, pasaré de puntillas sobre el análisis que el supergurú Ken Rockwell acaba de publicar sobre ella y donde no os vais a librar de un empacho de palmeras, ni de su encantadora familia – ¿ porqué me vendrá siempre a la cabeza la imagen de la familia Addams ? – y el acostumbrado ambiente de «Marina Dor – ciudad de vacaciones» habitual en esta WEB.
Así que solo para rellenar un poco y que la cosa quede más o menos bien, os pongo aquí el glosario de los puntos destacados del asunto según el criterio de bueno de Ken
New:
- Touch screen.
- 180º up/45º down swivelling screen.
- Stripped, offshored, no viewfinder version of the fabulous X100 series at a great price and still offering fabulous quality.
Good:
- Magnificently crafted.
- Tiny.
- Dedicated solid metal shutter, aperture, exposure mode and exposure compensation dials. (Auto exposure modes are selected with the A positions of shutter and/or aperture dials.)
- Superbly quiet leaf and completely silent electronic shutters.
- 1/4000 flash sync lets the tiny built-in flash work great for daylight fill-flash.
- Eight programmable function buttons, which includes the four unmarked central rear control buttons.
- What seems like a focus ring is programmable to control ISO sensitivity, Film Simulation modes, white balance, continuous shooting or the cropping modes.
- Flip screen doubles as a table stand.
Bad:
- No viewfinder.
- Hard to see the tiny LCD in daylight.
- Same bizarre reverse 49mm filter thread as the X100 series.
Missing:
- No viewfinder (repito)
- No auto brightness control for the LCD.
- No threaded cable release socket; have to use a dedicated electronic release instead.
- No image stabilization.
- No battery percentage indictor; just a segmented battery icon.
- No instant flash popup button, flash on/off instead controlled via a button and menu.
- Has only one rear left-right flipper for playback and menus that does not rotate as a dial would. (Does have dedicated Shutter, Aperture, Mode and compensation dials.)
Vale, y ya está. Todo lo demás lo encontraréis aquí: