06-22-2017, 12:04 AM
My comment was primarily based on thought that
- Fuji has an APS-C sensor which I would consider to be the sweet spot for mirrorless
- Their sensors are superior to MFT's and also somewhat better still than Sony's and Canon's APS-C sensors
- Their lens lineup is vastly superior to what Sony and Canon have to offer in the APS-C mirrorless segment
- Their color rendition (driven by the camera) is very nice
About the menu system ... well, being someone who has to switch camera systems all the time I couldn't care less really. If it matters - I'd say that Canon DSLRs (mid-spec & up) are the best here. The menu system is - in my view - the very last deciding factor of everything. But I am a simple guy. My biggest annoyance with Fuji cameras is that it resets some stuff (e.g. the timer) automatically. From a pure lab perspective, the focus-by-wire system is the worst of them all but that's really limited to the lab.
- Fuji has an APS-C sensor which I would consider to be the sweet spot for mirrorless
- Their sensors are superior to MFT's and also somewhat better still than Sony's and Canon's APS-C sensors
- Their lens lineup is vastly superior to what Sony and Canon have to offer in the APS-C mirrorless segment
- Their color rendition (driven by the camera) is very nice
About the menu system ... well, being someone who has to switch camera systems all the time I couldn't care less really. If it matters - I'd say that Canon DSLRs (mid-spec & up) are the best here. The menu system is - in my view - the very last deciding factor of everything. But I am a simple guy. My biggest annoyance with Fuji cameras is that it resets some stuff (e.g. the timer) automatically. From a pure lab perspective, the focus-by-wire system is the worst of them all but that's really limited to the lab.