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Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH1

The Lumix DMC-GH1 proves that there's fight and fury in the Micro Four Thirds format, with brilliant HD video quality and great still images.

Five years of CNET Australia: Digital cameras

CNET Australia takes a trip through the best (and worst) of digital photography over the past five years.

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Reviews

  • Olympus E-P1

    Though it's rather expensive, we can't help adoring the E-P1. The pictures it takes with the included lenses are mostly great, just don't expect compact-like features such as a viewfinder and flash to be included.

  • Olympus E-620

    If you've been hankering after an Olympus E-30 but baulked at the price, don't despair ... just get the E-620 instead. It's a competent, capable digital SLR in the vein of its older sibling, but a lot smaller and cheaper.

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Features

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  • Olympus high-end compact due mid-year

    Olympus has set a ship date, albeit one with a lot of wiggle room, for its first high-end compact camera using the micro four thirds technology.

  • Panasonic updates Lumix G1 to HD-wielding GH1

    A mere five months after introducing a radical new photographic format in the world's smallest interchangeable lens camera, the Lumix DMC-G1, Panasonic has unveiled the GH1, the same camera with HD recording capability.

  • Samsung unveils its hybrid camera

    Samsung has unveiled a hybrid camera, in an attempt to snatch some of the market away from micro four thirds cameras like Panasonic's G1.

  • Tests show ups and downs of Four Thirds cameras

    DxO Labs on Tuesday released new sensor test results for three cameras — Panasonic's G1 and Olympus' E-520 and E-410 — that show both the advantages and disadvantages of the Four Thirds standards the companies use.

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