Test du Panasonic Lumix DMC-G2 indexé le 13 Janvier 2011
Successeur du G1, le Panasonic Lumix DMC-G2 apporte l'enregistrement vidéo (en HD) et un écran tactile orientable. Comme sur le G1, les objectifs sont interchangeables.
The G2's touchscreen functionality aligns it where all current technology is headed - from the mobile phone in your pocket to the ticket machine you buy train tickets from. Far from being gimmicky, touch adds that extra dimension that makes perfect sense for quick-selecting AF points or utilising the camera's subject-tracking AF mode.
The Panasonic Lumix G2 is only an incremental upgrade from the original G1, but most of the changes are for the better. The touch-screen is, as always, just a gimmick, but the video mode is good. Build quality, performance and image quality are all still of a very high standard, but you can get better results from a full-size DSLR of the same price.
The best combination here of image quality, camera build and features, we highly recommend the Panasonic Lumix G2's one-touch HD video recording, choice of viewfinders and its tilting LCD. Buying in to the Micro Four Thirds concept in the first place is't cheap, but if you're up for the investment, this excellent camera is the model to choose.
The best combination here of image quality, camera build and features, we highly recommend the Panasonic Lumix G2â€â„¢s one-touch HD video recording, choice of viewfinders and its tiltable LCD. Buying in to the Micro FourThirds concept in the first place isnâ€â„¢t cheap, but if youâ€â„¢re up for the investment, this excellent camera is the model to choose.