-
Larger sensor
1/1.7 inch
vs
1/2.33 inch
More sensor area. Bigger is (generally) better.
-
Bigger pixels
~ 1.90
vs
1.54 microns
Better low-light and dynamic range (all else equal)
-
In-camera panoramas
Yes
vs
No
Stitches multiple shots into a panoramic photo
-
Larger lens aperture
f/1.4
vs
f/3.3
Take photos in low-light or isolate your subject
-
Tiltable Screen
Tiltable
vs
Fixed
Tilt the screen for shooting flexbility
-
RAW file ability
Yes
vs
No
Gives you more flexibility to develop your photos later
-
Fast startup
~1.70
vs
2.8 sec
Faster startup lets you catch the moment
-
Built-in Wi-Fi
Wi-Fi
vs
None
Share your photos wirelessly
-
Manual focus
Yes
vs
No
AF is for the weak. Real photographers focus manually.
-
Integrated ND filter
Yes
vs
No
Shoot in daylight with a large aperture or slow shutter
-
More dots on screen
614k
vs
460k dots
Can mean greater resolution or a brighter screen
-
Hot shoe
Hot shoe
vs
None
Off-camera flashes open new possibilities
-
Shoots 1080p video
Yes
vs
No
You'll want this if you shoot video
-
Less shutter lag
0.38
vs
0.67 sec
Focus and take a photo quickly (wide angle)
-
More pixels
12.4
vs
10.1 megapixels
Higher resolution photos
-
Faster JPEG shooting
10.1 fps
vs
1.8 fps
Faster JPEG shooting (burst mode)
-
Bigger JPEG buffer
9
vs
3 shots
Take more JPEG shots before waiting (burst mode)
-
Slow-motion videos
Yes
vs
No
Shoot slow-motion videos
-
Faster shutter
1/4000
vs
1/2000 sec
Shoot wide open in bright light
-
Higher extended ISO
12800
vs
6400 ISO
Higher extended ISO can give more low-light flexibility