FujiFilm just announced Firmware Update Version 2.0 for their flagship 24-megapixel rangefinder interchangeable lens digital camera, the X-Pro2, which debuted earlier this year. Improvements are noted ...
It’s four years since Fujifilm kicked off its X-Series range of mirrorless cameras at CES 2012 with the X-Pro1, and it’s hard to believe that we haven’t seen a new version of that camera since.
The world isn’t exactly short of fantastic compact system cameras, but every so often one comes along that manages to stand out from the pack. The X-Pro2 does exactly that. The follow up ...
Four years in the making, the Fujifilm X-Pro2 is the company's highest-ranking compact system camera. But have those four years been worth the wait, or is the latest model barely different to its ...
Photography News: Fujifilm Expands Their X-Series Mirrorless Camera Line With the X-Pro2, X-E2S and X70, and the XF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens, and Adds the Rugged XP90 to Their FinePix ...
If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement. Fujifilm’s new X-Pro2 is a tough camera to review by any ordinary metric — it’s an exotic tool that ...
The long-awaited update to the inaugural X camera features a 24-MP image sensor and an improved hybrid viewfinder. Images, and the devices that capture them, are my focus. I've covered cameras at ...
While Leica remains the only option for a real optical rangefinder in a digital camera, Fujifilm captured the attention of many rangefinder fans when it introduced the X-Pro1 back in 2012. And the ...
Given that the X-Pro1 debuted in 2012, one might be forgiven for thinking that Fujifilm had abandoned that track in favor of the more recent X-T1, the model which has held the flagship position in the ...
In the five years since the introduction of Fujifilm's X-Pro1 ($399.00 at Amazon), the mirrorless camera space has improved by leaps and bounds. The long-awaited X-Pro2 ($1,699, body only) takes ...
When the Fujifilm X-Pro1 burst onto the camera scene its retro digital rangefinder style was like a pleasurable punch to the face; the kind of kipper-slap that left us, and many, a bit tingly around ...
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