Olympus Mju 1060
The Olympus Mju 1060 is the best when it comes to long-zoom point-and-shoot, the Mju 1010’s range isn’t as far. The new model has similar specifications like the 7x optical zoom with 10-megapixel sensors just like the camera made before 1060. However, with the 1060 there are slight upgrades done to better the LCD size as well as the installation of a smarter automatic shooting mode.
The Designs are great because the buttons for the features of the camera are located in the back of the camera, with easy to read buttons. It’s not hard to tell the difference from the 1010 versus the 1060 because of the outside way it’s built because the newer model which is 1060 is slimmer than the older version 1010 and the lenses are larger, and there are backlit buttons featured and the buttons are so easy to read that you can operate this camera with one hand.
The LCD on the 1060 has also upgraded this time, because it’s designed to view up to 3 inches, and the 1010 had the 2.7-inch display, and the screen has a good viewing angle and it wasn’t difficult to take pictures and the sunlight won’t affect the picture, and there is a HyperCrystal LCD which Olympus has installed this time around and I think that helps. Highlights and shadowed areas activate smart shooting for better picture taking, and Panasonic is the first company to have that function installed, there is also an optical image stabilizer on the Mju 1060. The Olympus has a lot of storage space because it has 41.1GB and can be upgraded with 2GB more, you can also choose the microSD card but it’s only 2GB, and if you use it in that format, then you can’t use panorama shooting. Overall the performance for the 1060 is great with good fast face-detection, recognizing profiles quickly because it detected more than 15 faces within seconds. The lithium-ion battery seem to last forever because I took more than 189 photos and it was still functioning like I could take 100 more. The image quality is great and if you take shots don’t go beyond 775 ISO. Pictures really look their best when taken at 375 ISO anything above that has dots in the images. The sunlight or light(white in the picture) were well balanced anywhere I took a picture. However the Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-TZ15 has 10x optical zoom-in lens with 28mm wide-angle lens, and this shooter will be a challenge tothe Mju 1060. For more information about this camera please go to : Panasonic.com for the Lumix DMC-TZ15 and for the Mju Olympus America.com
[ad]
[ad#rss]
[ad#rssemail]


