
And Panasonic seems fully aware of these challenges. When announcing the camera, the company pointed out that more pixels on the same sized sensor does not always result in better image quality and described its approach with the LX3 as: "boldly reversing the industry trend of pushing toward ever-higher pixel counts." It's an admirable position (though one that would be easier to acclaim if the company hadn't, on the same day, released one of the most pixel-dense cameras we've ever seen), and one that seems promising - the benefits of newer sensor and processing technology without those advances being strangled by the downsides of smaller pixels. (And we believe that if you offer more pixels with the hard drive clutter and slower camera operation they bring, then those pixels must be good at the pixel level, otherwise, what benefits do those additional pixels bring?)
Headline features
24mm wide 2.5x optical LEICA DC lens
F2.0-2.8 maximum aperture range
MEGA O.I.S.(Optical Image Stabilizer)
Venus Engine IV
Joystick-operated manual control
Large 3.0” 460k dot LCD monitor
Raw and JPEG recording modes
Up to ISO 3200 sensitivity
Up to 1280x720 (30 fps) pixel movie capture
Manual exposure and focus options
1/2000th to 60 sec shutter speeds
Available in black or silver
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