Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ35 superzoom reviewed: crème de la crème

If you’re in the market for a superzoom, and you’ve already decided that none of those Micro Four Thirds options will sway you, it looks as if you’ll be hard pressed to find a superior alternative to Panasonic’s minty fresh Lumix DMC-FZ35 (FZ38 in some regions). Both TrustedReviews and PhotographyBLOG managed to score a unit for review, and both outlets came away generally impressed. The former concluded that the outfit’s newest 18x zoomer was only marginally changed from its predecessor, but those who skipped on over the FZ28 should certainly give this one a look. In fact, it straight up confessed that to “get anything better than this, you’ll have to move up to a DSLR.” You may notice that this bugger doesn’t offer the greatest zoom nor the most megapixels in its class, but the stellar image quality and even more stirring video mode kept critics from suggesting any of those more marketable rivals. Don’t believe us? Check the read links below for all the proof you can handle.

[Thanks, TheLostSwede]

Read – TrustedReviews’ take
Read – PhotographyBLOG review

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ35 superzoom reviewed: crème de la crème originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Jul 2009 07:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic’s new LUMIX consumer lineup: the high-powered FZ35, fashionable FP8 and thin-lensed ZR1

Panasonic is going at it from all angles today, with three new 12.1 megapixel LUMIX cameras with surprisingly distinct aims:

  • LUMIX FZ35 (pictured) – The requisite “superzoom” of every lineup, the FZ35 doesn’t disappoint on features, but the $400 pricepoint certainly pushes the limits of “consumer” camera. Features include 18x zoom and HD video recording, including a Creative Movie Mode with shutter speed and aperture settings for video. It also expands on typical facial recognition functionality with a “Baby mode” for… finding babies.
  • LUMIX FP8 – While it can handle HD video, the FP8 is more about looks. Still, the 12.1 megapixel sensor and 4.6x zoom aren’t bad for the form factor — though the $300 pricetag isn’t nothing.
  • LUMIX ZR1 – Featuring the “world’s first 0.3mm thin aspherical lens,” the ZR1 manages a full 8x optical zoom while keeping its girlish figure when extended. There’s also room for a 12.1 megapixel sensor. The cam goes for $280.

All the cameras pack optical image stabilization and facial recognition, and the ZR1 and FZ35 have a “High Dynamic Mode” which presumably emulates HDR photography to some extent. All three will be out in September. Full PR is after the break.

Continue reading Panasonic’s new LUMIX consumer lineup: the high-powered FZ35, fashionable FP8 and thin-lensed ZR1

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Panasonic’s new LUMIX consumer lineup: the high-powered FZ35, fashionable FP8 and thin-lensed ZR1 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 11:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic’s EVOLTA bot sets his doe-eyed sights on new endurance record

After risking life and limb to show off Panasonic’s double-As in a harrowing climb up the Grand Canyon, EVOLTA is back for more record setting hijinks. This time, however, he’s been tasked to pedal his adorable little heart out on a miniature tricycle. The plan is to take this year’s Le Mans race by storm and break some sort of world record for distance traveled by a robot — though we’re not sure how exactly that’s defined, since EVOLTA isn’t exactly a speed demon. This new version of the bot has been completely revamped to ride a bike and follow an infrared path blazed by his superiors. A couple of videos are after the break.

[Thanks, Alex]

Continue reading Panasonic’s EVOLTA bot sets his doe-eyed sights on new endurance record

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Panasonic’s EVOLTA bot sets his doe-eyed sights on new endurance record originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Jul 2009 10:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic’s Quick Power Dry hand dryer promises 2-3 second escapes from public toilets

Unless you’re a member of the US Senate or a British pop star, most people aren’t looking to linger about the dank confines of public toilets. Enter Panasonic and its new Quick Power Dry hand dryer that promises dry hands in just 2-3 seconds with the help of its 280MPH blower. That’s an “industry fastest” dry-time according to Panasonic and a crushing blow (har!) to Dyson’s Airblade that dries hands in 12 seconds despite 400MPH blasts of air. The wall-mountable Panny FJ-T13V1-W dryer is available now for ¥214,200 — that’s $2,280 in US monies which means you can forget about seeing ’em installed in the New York subway.

[Via Impress]

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Panasonic’s Quick Power Dry hand dryer promises 2-3 second escapes from public toilets originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Jul 2009 04:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH1 gets reviewed, recommended

If all those recently unveiled sample shots from Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-GH1 have left you wanting more, you’re in luck. The kids at Digital Photography Review have got their hands on the thing and have been kind enough to give us an extensive review. Rocking a Four Thirds imaging sensor, HD-video mode (with stereo sound recording), a multi-aspect sensor, and a video-optimized lens, the camera is essentially the G1 with HD-video, according to the review. Not that that’s a bad thing, especially when noting that it has “the best implementation of video on a ‘non-compact camera’ that we’ve seen so far.” Among the camera’s strong points are its resolution, size and weight, build quality, image stabilization, and shutter-speed simulation. Still the reviewer didn’t look kindly upon the camera’s relatively small amount of RAW headroom, fairly low powered flash, poor battery life, and a loud shutter sound for a non-SLR camera. But overall? If you need a camera that performs admirably with video, and are willing to pay the $1500 premium, the GH1 comes highly recommended.

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH1 gets reviewed, recommended originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Jul 2009 14:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic banks on robot drug dispensers

Panasonic isn’t the first company to turn to robots as a means for dispensing drugs, but it looks like it’s set to become one of the bigger players in the still fledgling field, with it announcing today that it’s developing a robot that it hopes will rake it about 30 billion yen (or $315 million) by 2016. Unfortunately, Panasonic isn’t quite ready to actually show off the robot just yet, but it says it could be making the rounds at some Japanese hospitals by next March, and head into the United States and Europe sometime after that. It’s also not ready to do much talking about specifics, with it only going so far as to say that it “does not look humanoid” but rather looks like “a cabinet with lots of small drawers” (no doubt somewhat like the Pyxis bot pictured above), and that it’ll be able to store medical data for each patient and sort out prescriptions for up to 400 patients in about two hours. That cabinet won’t come cheap though, with Panasonic estimating that it’ll cost “several tens of millions of yen,” or hundreds of thousands of dollars.

[Via TG Daily, image courtesy Wikipedia / Jeremy Kemp]

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Panasonic banks on robot drug dispensers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 14:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH1 Review: A $1500 Misfit

The micro-four-thirds standard created by Panasonic, Olympus and Leica has intrigued us but its mightiest product to date, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH1, leaves us scratching our heads.

Camera Be Still
When it comes to still shooting, there is no difference between the GH1 and the G1 that Mahoney reviewed last November. It has a digital viewfinder instead of an optical one, which takes some getting used to but tends to work. It’s got a huge number of manual and automatic options, as well as some uniquely digital settings, like “film mode” where you can manually adjust the color balance, saturation, contrast and noise reduction of the “film” you’re using. Because the sensor is 4:3 (hence the format’s name), you can change the aspect ratio to 16:9 for a wider view, but of course you sacrifice some pixels in the process. Update: Reader Ben tells me that no pixels are lost in the aspect ratio switch.

The camera has many of these novel options to keep track of, but it doesn’t pay a huge dividend to those who do. As Mahoney said in the original piece, its high-ISO shots are a bit more noisy than most DSLRs, and the lens selection is paltry compared to Canon and Nikon. As someone who carries mainly entry-level DSLRs (and generally wants for nothing more), I found myself simultaneously overwhelmed and unimpressed, though I did manage to eek out a few halfway decent shots, which I’ve stuck in the gallery below.

All of the above features and capabilities can be found on the $800 DMC-G1. What I tested, though, was the $1500 GH1, with an “H” for “Highdefinitionvideo.”

It’s Got an H In It
The H makes a big big difference, as David Pogue mentioned, and as Mahoney lamented.

The 1080p video is, in fact, astonishingly good, when you’re shooting in the right light with a decent lens. I used two lenses, the highly functional 14-140mm kit lens, and a playful 7-14mm wide angle lens with a touch of the fisheye.

The video comes in AVCHD format, which some people don’t like. I don’t mind it, though when I previewed it in VLC, it appeared to have a painful amount of compression artifacts. I was going to condemn the camera for that, until I wrangled the video in VisualHub, and found that all of the playback artifacts disappeared in conversion, and probably wouldn’t appear in other software. (Panasonic sent me GH1 software, but it was for PCs only, and I didn’t have a chance to check it out; some of you already know what to do with AVCHD vid anyway, so I wouldn’t make a big deal out of the included software either way.) As you can see in this quick up-close video of Wynona—dropped from 1080p to 500×280 and converted to FLV for your consumption—you can certainly get a lot done:

The rustling you hear is me playing with the camera strap to attract an otherwise lethargic cat’s attention; over the weekend, when I shot video of my family, the stereo mic array worked well, as long as I kept my own stinkin’ trap shut. Its placement, facing upwards, on top of the flash, means that the shooter’s voice is far louder than that of his or her subjects.

Video certainly is the GH1’s coup de grace, as others have proclaimed. Practically speaking, it’s a damn sight better than the video from the Canon T1i and the Nikon D5000, which are fine for quick snips but lack the autofocus necessary for a nice fluid continuous shot (Touch of Evil opener, anyone?). The GH1 dynamically refocuses well enough, though as you can see in the Wynona video, it can’t go super-macro with that 7-14mm lens.

Stupid Money
Still, we’re back to the same dilemma here: If moderately video capable DSLRs are selling for MSRPs around $900 (also with decent kit lenses), how can this baby be worth $600 extra? Still-only DSLRs cost in the $600 range—how can the GH1 be $900 more than those?

It’s a powerful camera, but I certainly didn’t feel as comfortable shooting with it as I do with Canon and Nikon DSLRs, and the video is, after all, video. The argument for video on other DSLRs is their compatibility with all kinds of lenses; here, it’s more like a decent video camera without a huge number of lenses. As Mahoney mentioned in the G1 review, you can get a lens adapter and use some nice Leica lenses, but do you really want to go to all that trouble? We’d be better suited for some a handful of interesting, made-for-micro-four-thirds primes.

Even if we get all that, though, the price remains prohibitive. If you are tempted by the video capability of this camera, you are still better suited to buying a nice DSLR and a true HD camcorder of your choosing from Panasonic or Sony or Canon. I wish I could say that the excellent 1080p video tips the scales, but it doesn’t. [Product Page]

In Brief:
HD video performance is exceptional for a high-end still camera, and notably better than “competing” DSLRs

Lots of manual digital manipulation means a lot to read up on and remember—it’s not easily hidden from the beginner, but in the hands of an undaunted shooter, there’s a lot of potential

The camera’s entry cost is far too high to justify when it’s not a big winner in still shooting, and when HD camcorder prices are dropping

TechSaver: Panasonic Viera HDTV, Electric Guitar, Vase USB Speaker

PanasonicViera.jpg

Talk about a good deal: I got a Firefox 3.5 download absolutely free a little while ago.

1. If you're anything like me, there's one feature that really gets your attention: a built-in iPod dock. My radios have iPod docs, my toilet tissue holder has an iPod dock. Why, I've even got an iPod dock with a second iPod dock built in, just in case I want to listen to both at the same time. That's why I was thrilled to see this Panasonic Viera 32-inch LCD HDTV with an iPod dock. You can use it to view your photos on the big screen or watch videos stored on your iPod. Dell has it for $449 (you'll have to click to see the sale price).

2. If you've got the latest Apple iLife suite and you'd like to try out the free music lessons that come with GarageBand, this is a deal for you. Musician's Friend is selling the Epiphone Dot Studio Semi-Hollow electric guitar for $199 (in the worn brown finish) with free shipping. Learn on it and get instant feedback from GarageBand showing how you're doing.

3. You won't need an outlet when you've got the boynq Vase USB speaker, which delivers two-way sound using just a USB port. RadioShack has it for $9.99. It doesn't hold flowers, but its vase-shaped good looks will enhance your desktop.

Panasonic Z1 wireless HDTV appearing in US retailers

Hey, look at that — it’s Panasonic’s super-hot one-inch thick Z1 wireless HDTV, just cold sitting out for sale in a San Jose Magnolia store. No official availability announcement yet, but we’re guessing it’s coming soon, right on time for the Z1’s planned summer debut. Everyone got their $6,000 ready?

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Panasonic Z1 wireless HDTV appearing in US retailers originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Jun 2009 01:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic starts locking out third-party batteries with new firmware

Kodak’s already taken some steps to cut down on counterfeiting of its batteries, and it looks like Panasonic is now taking some fairly drastic measures of it own, which could leave some users of its cameras a tad unhappy. Apparently, the company has determined that some third-party batteries amazingly don’t meet its own rigid safety standards, so it’s now released a new firmware update that can detect said batteries and prevent them from working. At the moment, that only includes cameras that use DMW-BCF10, DMW-BCG10, or DMW-BLB13 battery packs (some sixteen cameras in all), but it seems safe to assume that this’ll soon be standard practice on all Panasonic cameras.

[Via Slashdot]

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Panasonic starts locking out third-party batteries with new firmware originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Jun 2009 11:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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