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No hay artículos en el carroDescubra características fáciles de usar, como el suavizado de piel, el equilibrio de impresión de retrato y el enfoque automático de detección de rostro + ojos para personas y animales. Además, fondos auténticos y hermosamente difuminados.
Rob
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 2 de marzo de 2025
A great update to the Z50. The AF is fantastic, and the useability is - as all Nikons are - very natural and intuitive.
Daniel Champagne
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de marzo de 2025
All excited to open and fingerprints on the screen and no charging cable at full price. No thanks.
R. Angeloni
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 30 de diciembre de 2024
The original first generation Nikon Z50 camera was a very good camera but suffered from a less than ideal focusing system for fast moving subjects like birds, wildlife, or sports. While it was possible to get good photos of fast moving subjects with the Z50, there was more of a learning curve to understanding the focusing system (especially if you were using a DSLR camera) and it might take longer (more shots) to get a great action photo you were looking to get.The Nikon Z50II has a much more advanced focusing system. Equipped with Nikon's latest Expeed 7 processor, the Z50II has inherited most of the focusing system from the much larger and much more expensive Nikon Z9, Z8, Z6III, and Zf full frame cameras. Focusing is now very fast, and, with focusing options like 3D (and subject detection modes, including pets, birds, airplanes, and cars) the camera locks on to the subject very quickly and stays with it.The Z50II, which is a little larger and heavier than the first generation Z50, but still pretty small, also has Pre-Release, which allows you to hold down the shutter and capture a number of stills before the photo is taken, great for capturing birds as they take off from a branch or pole.The camera also has a dedicated Picture Control button, for changing picture profiles quickly, and it connects to the new Nikon Imaging Cloud, where you can download and load on to the camera more picture profiles.For video, the Z50II can shoot full-width UHD 4K at 30fps, but requires a 1.5x crop to hit 60fps. It has video-focused features like a tally light, waveform monitoring, N-Log, and headphone and microphone jacks, and a flippy screen that makes it much easier to shoot selfies or video. The screen on the first generation Z50 just pulled out; the flippy screen provides more options.What the Z50II does not have is IBIS (In Body Image Stabilization), which is very useful for video. Most of Nikon’s APS-C lenses have vibration reduction, which does helps with image stabilization. Nikon also did not change the battery meter in the Z50II, so the battery only shows three bars (when full) and not a percentage of how much power is left. With mirrorless cameras and a general battery meter like this, it is always best to carry two batteries, as the meter is not always an accurate indication of how much power is left.Nikon also does not include a charger with the camera. The camera can be charged with a USB-C cable, which is included. The camera charged with the adapter I use to charge my Samsung S24 phone, as well as via my laptop, so it should charge with most modern power adapters and a USB-C cable.Bottom line, the Nikon Z50II is a worthy upgrade from the original, and for anyone looking for an affordable, solid performing mirrorless camera for photos and video. The autofocus system is outstanding, and the detection modes seem to work particularly well.The camera, either with the 16mm-50mm kit lens or body only, is priced well, and the Z50II has many of the characteristics of the more expensive full frame cameras.Highly recommended!
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