Hasselblad's new medium format flagship comes with end-to-end HDR
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Hasselblad's new medium format flagship comes with end-to-end HDR
"Other notable upgrades include using LiDAR to assist with autofocus, a 10-stop in-body stabilization system, an additional customizable button, and a new joystick for controlling camera functions instead of using touchscreen commands. At $7,399, it's cheaper than its three-year-old predecessor, and still shares some similarities: it takes 100 megapixel photos, comes with 1TB of internal SSD storage, offers similar dynamic range, and the shape is largely unchanged."
"Hasselblad has just launched the X2D II 100C, the first medium format camera capable of taking true HDR photos. Those HDR images can be instantly reviewed on the new 3.6-inch OLED touchscreen at up to 1,400 nits of peak brightness, which Hasselblad says is 75 percent brighter than the original X2D 100C. These don't overshadow the improvements on the latest model, however, which my colleague Vjeran describes as "one of the greatest cameras I have ever used.""
Hasselblad introduced the X2D II 100C, a medium-format camera capable of capturing true HDR images. The camera includes a new 3.6-inch OLED touchscreen with up to 1,400 nits peak brightness, 75 percent brighter than the previous model, enabling instant HDR image review. Hardware upgrades include LiDAR-assisted autofocus, a 10-stop in-body stabilization system, an additional customizable button, and a physical joystick for camera control. The X2D II retains a 100-megapixel sensor, 1TB internal SSD, similar dynamic range, and largely unchanged body shape, while arriving at a lower $7,399 price than its predecessor.
Read at The Verge
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