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wuchang said: Hi Chris
Dabs pretty much summarized a lot of this up.
I am a DSLR guy and don't have a lot of experience with the 4/3's system-mirrorless camera systems.
but since you asked.....
I called one of the best local photographers I know that shoots the Olympus equivalent to your Panasonic(they can use each brand's lens). This gal has more published photos than you can shake a stick at and some of them were taken with the Olympus-- However, she shoots Nikon when she is 'serious' but loves the Olympus size and weight for using as a walk around/family get together--non commercial/non competition camera.
If the camera is too heavy or cumbersome -- you won't carry it and you will miss a photo that you wish you had something better than you smart phone.
The Panasonic is pretty light and has a smaller form and I'm sure your wife would find it a better fit for her
Might be a bit small for your ham hock hands but you can live with it with a little practice.
The Panasonic your missus picked is a good camera--shoots 4K video if you are into video. 4K is state of the art when it comes to video-- most of the DSLRs in that price range shoot 1080p
She suggested that if you are going to shoot 'action' you set the camera to the slower setting---seems the higher frame rate is a lot more touchy and might have shots that are not in focus in the burst
The slower burst has a much better in focus rate if you are shooting action per her experience
The alternative is to extract "stills" from the video
Bottom line is... it is a good consumer camera.
Because of the sensor size, you can take the lens in millimeters and 'double' it to get a 35mm equivalent
So if you got the 14-40 'kit' lens you have a 28-80 equivalent which gives you a semi-wide angle at 28mm(wide is 24 mm or less)and a good portrait lens at 80 mm-- a good family occasions type camera
Olympus has a 50-150 (100-300) which gets you to the minimum 'bird lens with the addition of a tele-extender to over 400mm.
Is it the set up I would have picked? Probably not but my picks would put a lot bigger dent in your bank account and 2nd guessing your lovely bride who probably got tired of you not buying a camera system might end up being more costly-- if not in sleep on the couch time for being a forking know it all and then asking a bunch of internet yahoos
Final thought $1,000 camera is a lot cheaper than a divorce attorney and if it doesn't work out for you--- then you can look at a Canon 80D and a 70-200 or something else like a Canon 7DMII and 100-400 L II
Until then, smile--take the class and have fun with the set up she bought your family
just saying
Wu
Yeah, what he said! I was just getting ready to say the same thing!
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