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Sony's confusion of dSLRs

By Lori Grunin, CNET.com


Sony Alpha DSLR-A300


One supposes it was inevitable. With its latest camera announcements, Sony brings its scorched-earth camera marketing philosophy--blanketing each price segment with multiple choices in hopes that one combination of design and features hits pay dirt--to consumer digital SLRs. Today's announcement of the Alpha DSLR-A300 and A350 brings Sony's total number of dSLRs in the US$700 to US$900 range to three. The models, despite some really nice feature sets, have just enough significant trade-offs to engender frustration rather than delight at the variety.

First, here's an overview of the new consumer lineup:
  Alpha DSLR-A200 Alpha DSLR-A300 Alpha DSLR-A350 Alpha DSLR-A700
Sensor 10.2-megapixel CCD
23.6 x 15.8mm
10.2-megapixel CCD
23.6 x 15.8mm
14.2-megapixel CCD
23.6 x 15.8mm
10.2-megapixel CCD
23.6 x 15.8mm
Continuous shooting 3fps
unlimited JPEG/6 RWA
3fps
unlimited JPEG/6 RAW
2 fps
unlimited JPEG/4 RAW
3fps
unlimited JPEG/6 RAW
Viewfinder 0.83X magnification
fixed matte focusing screen
95 percent coverage
0.74X magnification
fixed matte focusing screen
95 percent coverage
0.74X magnification
fixed matte focusing screen
95 percent coverage
0.83X magnification
interchangeable matte focusing screen
Autofocus 9-pt AF
one cross-type sensor in center
9-pt AF
one cross-type sensor in center
9-pt AF
one cross-type sensor in center
11-pt AF
two cross-type sensors in center (one F2.8)
Live View No Yes Yes Yes
LCD size 2.7 inches/fixed 2.7 inches/tiltable 2.7 inches/tiltable 3 inches/fixed
Price US$699 (w/ 18-70mm lens) US$799 (w/ 18-70mm lens) US$799 (body only); US$899 (w/ 18-70mm lens) US$1,299 (body only)
Availability End of February End of April Mid March Now


Sony Alpha DSLR-A350 with optional battery grip
Sony Alpha DSLR-A350 with optional battery grip


All the models have Super SteadyShot sensor-shift image stabilization and support sensitivities that range from ISO 100-3200, as well as the typical array of firmware-based features, such as Advanced Dynamic Range Optimization. With the A300 and A350, Sony also introduces Live View shooting mode to its dSLRs. Sony's 2-sensor implementation harks back to the more seamless approach pioneered--and subsequently discarded--by Olympus. With a secondary sensor dedicated to receiving a preview image off the imaging sensor, there's no need to flip the mirror up for preview and focus, then flip it back down to shoot, proving a more typical snapshot-like experience when framing via the LCD. In addition, Sony incorporates a flip-up LCD, which makes the feature not just practical, but actually useful (predominantly for overhead and from-the-hip shooting). We would prefer a flip-and-twist display, like that found on the Olympus E-3, but hey--you can't have everything.

Sony Alpha DSLR-A350
Sony Alpha DSLR-A350 with optional battery grip


So the extra US$100 you pay to go from the A200 to A300 gets you Live View. Or Live View, plus higher resolution but minus a lens, 1 frame-per-second continuous shooting speed, and a significantly lower-magnification viewfinder (A200 to A350). Between the A300 and the A350, which have the same tiny viewfinder and Live View, for the same US$799 you have to decide whether you want the lens kit, or higher resolution and slower speed. You could opt for the Canon EOS 450D, which competes directly against the A350 at that US$799 body-only price, but which delivers a better combination of resolution and performance for the money.

Also debuting at PMA, Sony introduces a pair of lenses: A pricey-but-probably-yummy Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* 24-70mm F2.8 ZA (US$1,749) and a basic telephoto zoom 70-300mm F4.5-6.3 G SSM (US$799). Both will be available this spring.

 

 

    Talkback
wilswong says...
I am confused...seems like no one has learned from the Vista debacle~

 
 
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