Sony released two new cameras this week and sent a clear message: speed is important. We got to spend some quality time shooting with the new RX100 V advanced compact camera at an event in NYC last ...
Left: Mitsuhiro Suzaki, Deputy General Manager of the Lens Technology and System business unit. Right: Yasufumi Machitani, ...
What's Hot: Impressive image and video quality for a camera this small, offers manual controls and RAW. Does high bitrate video recording, 4K and slow motion. What's Not: Very expensive, can only ...
Sony has raised the bar once again with the fourth installment of the series: the Sony Cyber-Shot RX100 IV (MSRP $948). The RX100 IV builds on its predecessor with a new (and slightly improved) sensor ...
Buying the right camera, lens, accessory or software to suit your photography is really important. Our product reviews offer independent views with hands-on opinion and honest verdicts aimed to give ...
Sony has officially launched the fifth generation of its RX100 camera, the RX100 V model DSC-RX100M5. As expected from Sony, little has changed from the last iteration of this camera in terms of its ...
The RX100 V has the world's fastest autofocus system for a compact, while the α6500 interchangeable lens camera is equally speedy with in-camera five-axis optical image stabilization. Managing Editor ...
As casual photographers turn increasingly to their smartphones to take pictures, serious shooters who want an ultraportable camera have an exciting new choice in Sony’s DSC-RX100 ($650, as of November ...
Sony built the best compact camera in the world with the original RX-100 – now it’s on the third-generation, and it isn’t resting on its laurels. The latest edition has a pop-up electronic viewfinder, ...
Compact cameras are great in that their pocket-sized form means you can always have them with you when you need to take a photo. Unfortunately this "pocketability" often comes at a price ... the small ...
When the Sony RX100 was announced, its one-inch sensor and f/1.8 aperture seemed too good to be true. Near-DSLR power packed into a body the size of a compact point-and-shoot camera? What’s the catch?