Pinchers of Peril said:Are you shooting with the camera in RAW or jpeg? Part of the reason I want to get this camera is because i've read that the jpeg files straight out are pretty good. I do all of my "serious shooting" with my 5dIII in raw and then post process but I kind of like the idea of having a camera that I can use casually and get good pics straight out without worrying about when I'll have a chance to edit them later. Everybody I talk to says they love it and it seems like the ideal "walk around" camera. I find myself not bringing my 5dIII certain places just because it can be a bit cumbersome.
Dylan777 said:Mark my words, if Fuji ever make FF mirrorless(similar to x100 series & same EVF as Sony), I will sell my A7r and stay there permantly. I LOVE the body design of x100s. I wish A7r has same EVF as x100s, keep the system even more compact.


Pinchers of Peril said:Wow I initially posted this almost exactly a year ago and am happy to report that I just put in an order for a Fuji x100t yesterday. Now I need to find a new toy to drool over.
Pookie said:After over a year of use I'm still on the fence with the X100S... great images but the painfully slow AF and inability to quickly shift AF spot is making me hate using this camera.
distant.star said:Pookie said:After over a year of use I'm still on the fence with the X100S... great images but the painfully slow AF and inability to quickly shift AF spot is making me hate using this camera.
I don't get the slow AF complaints. I've had mine since last Spring, and AF speed is no issue -- it acquires and records as fast as I push the button in normal use. With difficult AF targets, it can get just as confused as my 5D3.
A word of advice to anyone considering this camera -- it is NOT a DSLR. If you expect it to act like one, you may be disappointed. This camera will not adapt to you -- be prepared to relearn a few things, especially if you never used range finder type cameras.
distant.star said:Pookie said:After over a year of use I'm still on the fence with the X100S... great images but the painfully slow AF and inability to quickly shift AF spot is making me hate using this camera.
I don't get the slow AF complaints. I've had mine since last Spring, and AF speed is no issue -- it acquires and records as fast as I push the button in normal use. With difficult AF targets, it can get just as confused as my 5D3.
A word of advice to anyone considering this camera -- it is NOT a DSLR. If you expect it to act like one, you may be disappointed. This camera will not adapt to you -- be prepared to relearn a few things, especially if you never used range finder type cameras.