I absolutely hate flip out screens because if you actually use the ports the screen is unusable when shooting handheld or from the hip. And I hate not having the screen aligned with the lens.
In flog 2 it's a base iso of 1200 (I believe), and we used a 6-9 stop ND (mostly at 6). Even at those sittings, in midday, comparing the Flog2 shots with standard mode, I still found I liked the image a lot more and also felt I had more flexibility with color grading. While having such a high base ISO isn't ideal, I still preferred shooting flog2, I thought the images were stronger.
I just got the X-H2s on Sunday, and immediately did the 1.1 firmware update. I have had no trouble at all with autofocus, shooting family members, including my dog and a parrot.
From the limited time spent with this camera, I was impressed with the IBIS. I tend to rely on it as little as possible, even with Sony, so it's hard for me to say how truly solid it was in comparison.
Well the articulating screen becomes abcolutely useless as soon as you plug something in the camera. Here it looks like you can plug HDMI and mic and still rotate it, but no headphones or USB.
"The autofocus is fast and reliable" Ummm, have you actually looked at your video footage? Many of your shots missed focus. I appreciate you are trying to sell cameras, but please don't lie to people. If AF is important, there are much better options out there at $2,500. And you didn't even mention the AE stepping that's still obvious when zooming in or out.
@@clausstahl5166 If AF is high priority you’d have to go with Sony or Canon. I’ve shot Fuji for a long time and just bought an A7iv. It’s an unbelievable camera, especially for the same price.