Nikon's Z5II Is a Fantastic Camera at a Budget Price
Briefly

Nikon's Z5II Is a Fantastic Camera at a Budget Price
"I've always thought of the term "entry level" as code for "a camera without the useless stuff," versus high-end cameras with the most impressive spec sheets, which are really only useful to sports and wildlife photographers. If you're one of the latter, then yes, you do need as many frames per second as you can get. But I have never in my entire 40 years of photography needed to shoot more than a few frames per second."
"The Z5II is an improvement over its predecessor, with more advanced video features, autofocus subject detection from Nikon's higher-end cameras (yes, the Z5II can now detect birds), and other nice extras like prerelease capture and support for the HEIF image format. It all adds up to a very impressive, still not terribly expensive, mirrorless camera."
"24-MP sensor offers great image quality and impressive dynamic range. Faster processor vastly improves autofocus. Subject tracking and eye detection. 4K/30-fps full-sensor-width video. 14 frames-per-second burst mode."
The Nikon Z5II upgrades the original Z5 with a newer 24-megapixel sensor that delivers strong image quality and notable dynamic range. A faster processor enables vastly improved autofocus, including subject tracking, eye detection, and bird detection. Video capabilities include full-sensor-width 4K at 30 fps. Still photography performance reaches up to 14 frames per second for burst shooting. Additional features include prerelease capture and HEIF image format support. The camera targets entry-level full-frame users who do not require extreme high-end specifications, though the price has increased by about $500 compared with the previous model.
Read at WIRED
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