Hardware
Shape and size aside, the NX is aesthetically more akin to a smartphone or tablet. There are far fewer buttons and dials than you'd expect to find on a camera -- instead, all settings are adjusted from within the Android camera app, which you'll access through the 4.8-inch, 720p, touch-enabled LCD. There's also a 0.46-inch SVGA electronic viewfinder, which outputs a more traditional preview screen, with information like aperture, shutter speed and ISO.
From the front, the Galaxy NX looks like any other EVF-equipped mirrorless camera. It's taller, wider and heavier than most similarly specced models on the market today, but not uncomfortably so. There's a lens release and focus-assist light flanking the 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 kit optic around front, then a pop-up flash (with release), hot shoe, microphone, power button, control dial, video record button and shutter release up top. On the left side, you'll find a standard headphone jack, a micro-USB port (which you'll use to charge the camera) and an HDMI port. The bottom contains a tripod mount and a large door covering the micro-SIM, microSD and battery compartments. All three components, including the relatively massive 4,360mAh cell, slide in behind the large extended grip.
Software and user interface
I shot exclusively with the Galaxy NX during a two-week journey around the world. I lugged the camera through Zurich, Tokyo, Taipei and Shanghai every day of the trip, staying online with an unlimited global SIM from KeepGo. That latter bit of technology enabled flawless connectivity everywhere I traveled, letting me use the device dangling around my neck to navigate city streets, respond to email and, of course, share dozens of high-quality photos and videos on Instagram seconds after they were shot. Most of the time I left my smartphone at the hotel, relying on the NX and its fantastic battery to help me navigate each city as I uploaded photos in real time and kept in touch with the office while 8,000 miles from home.
But the moment I returned to New York, the Galaxy NX went into a drawer and didn't re-emerge until I began working on this review. While the NX was a great fit for that two-week tour, it's just not very practical at home. And that makes sense. Snapping a casual photo every other day was much easier to accomplish with a traditional smartphone, and if I'm not exploring a new city, there's really no need to capture images with a fantastic camera.
Of course, if you're shooting through a third-party app, you'll need to depend on that UI for any exposure adjustments. Generally you'll be limited to automatic mode, without an option to change ISO or take advantage of any of the "Smart" options, like Rich Tone or Action Freeze. You can theoretically shoot from the native camera application, save images to the gallery and access them later through another app like Twitter or Instagram, but a bug in the software version I reviewed made sharing full-res images from the gallery impossible. Samsung is looking into the issue, however, and I imagine a fix is in the works. As a workaround, I used a generic Android app called "Images easy resizer" to scale down images and save a copy, at which point I was able to access them through Instagram and Gmail.
Performance and battery life
Of course, one of the biggest issues with using a camera that runs Android is a delayed start-up. When it's completely powered down, the NX takes a reasonable 28 seconds to boot up before you're ready to snap your first shot. Fortunately, a short press of the power button simply turns off the display, just as it would on a phone, and launching back into the camera from standby takes less than five seconds. In this regard, it's certainly not as speedy as a traditional ILC, but depending on your subject, it should do the trick. You can also configure the NX to jump right into the camera app whenever you press the shutter button, so if you see something you'd like to shoot, but you're currently sending an email or reading a webpage, it's easy enough to switch modes for a moment.
Battery life is phenomenal. After deplorable performance with last year's Galaxy Camera, I was definitely concerned about the NX making it through a full day. In practice, however, I had nothing to worry about, as long as I charged the battery overnight. While shooting on Halloween, I spent the day exploring Shanghai, returning to the hotel nine hours later with a 32 percent charge remaining. When you factor in the Google Maps browsing, emailing, Instagram sharing, Foursquare check-ins, 128 photos and nearly three minutes of 1080p video I was able to capture along the way, that's solid performance. Of course, I'd expect nothing less from a 4,360mAh battery pack, but it's great to see that Samsung planned ahead here.
Image quality
IQ-wise, the Galaxy NX is an NX300 through and through. That means image quality is top-notch, and more than adequate for the casual shooting you'll probably be doing. In fact, if the interface wasn't so cumbersome and the camera body so large, I wouldn't hesitate to switch to the NX for all of my important shoots at trade shows and launch events. It's really that great. Let's take a look at some samples.The competition
On the traditional mirrorless-camera front, you can do a heck of a lot better for only $300 more. Sony's brand-new Alpha 7 packs a full-frame sensor and a decent kit lens, and it's shipping soon for $2,000. Of course, Samsung's NX300 is an obvious pick, too, and at just $550 with a 20-50mm lens, you'll have enough cash left over to pick up just about any smartphone on the market, without a two-year contract, and treat your family to a night on the town to celebrate your fiscal responsibility. Or you can use the leftover dough to fund a flight to China for you and your brand-new (and reasonably priced) ILC.
Wrap-up
Source: ENGADGET
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