Viddy well
The E-M5’s video capabilities have been massively improved, and you now get 4K shooting in true C4K resolution at 24fps.
Things have really moved on since the OM-D E-M5 Mark II launched in 2015. With Sony and Canon pushing things forward, Olympus was starting to look like Disco Stu at grime night… but the new Mark III packs a lot of tech into a tiny body and serves up images as good as the best of them.
This Micro Four-Thirds camera will slip easily into a small bag – it feels light and portable even with a lens on. The only downside: Olympus has used un-premium polycarbonate for the body.
Thanks to a host of well-placed manual controls, it’s mad easy to handle. On top there’s a nice big mode selector with a locking button and two customisable dials for shutter speed, aperture, exposure compensation or other settings. A handy little switch lets you toggle between two modes.
The tech stuffed inside this thing is astonishing. It has one of the most effective image stabilisation systems we’ve used, meaning you can shoot handheld down to 1/4s or even slower with good results, and in murky conditions. And the AF has been upgraded to 121-point phase-detection.
Battery life is so-so – Olympus claims 310 shots or an hour of video. There’s no built-in flash, but it does come with an external one that can flip and rotate. This does a great job in most situations.
Tech specs
Sensor 20.4MP Micro Four-Thirds
Displays 3in LCD touchscreen, 2.36m-dot OLED EVF
Video 4K/C4K @ 24fps, Full HD @ 30fps
This story is from the April 2020 - Issue 104 edition of Stuff Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the April 2020 - Issue 104 edition of Stuff Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Automobili Pininfarina B95 Gotham BAT'S ENTERTAINMENT
More of a Brucemobile, actually. Pininfarina is well-known for its coach-built electric Barchetta, with a price tag that runs into the millions.
HOT STUFF
ALL THE BIGGEST STORIES FROM PLANET TECH
BRAINY BLAZE AND FUN DAYS
Considering a handheld gaming PC? Acer has just made the choice that bit more difficult…
TECH THE HALLS
Santa's elves are busy this year, and they aren't too strong with electronics anyway - so we've lightened their load by bringing you a Christmas Gift Guide so epic that old Saint Nick would be proud, with presents for everyone from gamers through to retro fanatics. Prepare to get spendy...
G6 is just alright
Samsung's latest Odyssey gaming monitor is better than alright... which is just as well if it aims to make QD-OLED a mainstream option
You never can Dell
A Qualcomm chipset should help the XPS 13 retain its status as the go-to Windows ultraportable in the age of Copilot+ smarts... shouldn't it?
Teeny TV Genie
Are you not entertained? Make friends with this Google-fied portable TV and spice up that exceptionally dull camping trip
Squareless whisper
This budget smartwatch sequel from the Nothing sub-brand no longer looks like an Apple Watch wannabe... but can it improve on the original?
Starting from the bottom
It's a good time to buy a budget smartphone. High-end features are cheaper than ever and some, like TCL's wallethugger, look pricier than their tags would suggest.
The alternatives: Apple's new Pro models
The iPhone 16 may be this generation's best value pick, but the Pro range still offers the top level of performance. Here's how they stack up...