Don't
let the Samsung NX2000's big 'ol interchangeable lens and APS-C image sensor
fool you—its touchscreen UI is designed for the jabs of the simplest operators.
At
first, you'd think the NX2000 fits right in with other more advanced
touchscreen cameras coming out these days. You see, even if a $650 mirrorless
camera like the NX2000 succeeds in cramming DSLR image quality worthy of its
20.3-megapixel APS-C sensor into that little, lightweight body, it won't
ever—ever—handle like a DSLR. Button-rich operability doesn't scale down, and
addding touchscreen can help. It's a logical design improvement.
But on
Samsung's other mirrorless cameras, touchscreens have been auxiliary
tools—because while ditching button controls altogether might work on a tiny
point-and-shoot, a more expensive, more powerful camera like the NX2000 sort of
implies that its users are going to want more control.
Well what you're
getting with the NX2000 is less control. Werid right? Check out the
camera's back panel, which is almost completely consumed by a 3.7-inch
touchscreen. Only a few buttons remain. The standard-issue mode dial on top by
the shutter release is missing, and even the "Home" button on the
back doesn't do anything but take the touch UI back to square one. You know,
like the home button on an Android phone.
Indeed, from
behind, the NX2000 looks more like the Samsung Galaxy Camera (left) than the $750 (including lens) mirrorless Samsung NX300 (right). The
former, is a connected point-and-shoot that runs Android, while the
latter is a more sophisticated beast whose guts would seem to make it the
NX2000's cousin
Besides
using the Galaxy Camera's entirely touch-based camera UI, plastic build,
andfixed touchscreen, the NX2000 doesn't have much in common with Galaxy Camera
at all. Actually, it inherits the NX300's important features, including its
overhauled Wi-Fi sharing and new image processor. The two NX cameras even sport
APS-C image sensors from the same family, though, the NX2000's is a generation
older and has slower autofocus potential.
Which is all a
long way of saying that the touchscreen UI is an odd choice for an NX-series
mirrorless shooter. It seems that like the Galaxy Camera—and let's face it, a
lot of Samsung products these days—the NX2000 is a test product. In this case,
we'll find out if there are folks out there willing to pay a premium for
simplicity. [Source]
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