There are a wide range of AF modes available - Face/Eye/Body/Animal detection, tracking, multiple-area AF with up to 225 focus areas, Zone (vertical/horizontal), Zone (Oval), 1-area AF with a selectable focus area, 1-Area, and Pinpoint. Within the Face/Eye/Body/Animal detection option, animal detection can be set to on or off. In this mode you can quickly and intuitively select between multiple faces or eyes on the fly using the rear joystick. In practice the S1R proved to be quick and tenacious at recognising and locking onto a subject's eye, although the way in which Panasonic show this in the viewfinder takes some getting used to, using a crosshair rather than a small rectangular box as with other rival systems, most notably Sony. The AF point can also be resized and positioned anywhere within the frame using the touchscreen LCD or a combination of the rear control dial and the rear scroll wheel.
Along with video, auto-focus and burst shooting are two other areas where the S1R lags behind the competition a little. The contrast AF system with Panasonic's unique DFD technology isn't quite on par with the S1R's main rivals in terms of focusing speed, while the 6fps burst shooting rate with continuous AF is surpassed by the Sony A7R III (10fps). Other complaints are much more minor - the On/Off switch is rather inconveniently positioned, the LCD screen only tilts up/down, rather than out to the side as on the Lumix G9, the crosshair used to denote lock-on for Eye AF is much more subtle than on other cameras, and there's no separate AE/AL lock button. Overall, though, the first-generation Lumix S1R gets most things right, and very little wrong.
Cs Go Crosshair 1080i Vs 1080pl
The S1R proved to be quick and tenacious at recognising and locking onto a subject's eye. Panasonic have implemented a different way of showing this in the viewfinder, using a crosshair rather than a small rectangular box, as with other camera systems, so if you've used, say, a Sony Alpha camera for a while, you might initially wonder why the Eye AF doesn't seem to be working, when it fact it is...
I need to know if I can run 2x 1080i transcodes and 1x 4K direct stream with the specs above? Want to upgrade to a 4K TV at some point this year or early next year. If we get the stimulus money then it will definitely be this year. I have an audio setup that works well, but I need a good way to watch 4K content. So I need to know if Im purchasing a USB 4K Blu-ray drive or a stand alone Blu-ray Player. Id like to start getting costs down so I can figure out how much I want to spend on a TV.
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