Panasonic Lumix DMC-GM1
Overview
TypeMicro Four Thirds system
Lens
LensMicro Four Thirds system mount
Sensor/medium
Sensor4/3 type CMOS
Sensor size17.3 x 13.0 mm (in 4:3 aspect ratio)
Maximum resolution4592 x 3448 (16.84 megapixels)
Storage mediaSD /SDHC / SDXC
Focusing
Focus modesAF Single, AF Flexible, AF Continuous, Manual focus,

Face Detection, AF Tracking, 23 Area Focusing / 1 Area Focusing, Pinpoint, AF detection range: EV -4 – 18 (ISO 100),

Quick AF, Continuous AF, AF+MF, Touch AF/AE, Touch Shutter, MF Assist, Touch MF Assist, One Shot AF
Exposure/metering
Exposure modesAperture priority,

Shutter, Program AE, Manual,

iAuto, SCN, Movie, Custom (2)
Metering modesMultiple, Center-Weighted, Spot
Flash
FlashBuilt-in flash
Shutter
ShutterElectronically-controlled focal-plane shutter / electronic shutter
Shutter speed range60–1/16,000 sec
Continuous shooting7 RAW images,
Image processing
White balanceAuto, Daylight, Cloudy, Shade, Incandescent, Flash, White Set 1/2, Color temperature setting
General
Video recordingAVCHD 1080p (24p, 25p, 50i, 50p fps), MP4 720p (25p, 50p fps), VGA 480p (25p fps)
LCD screen3 inch touch panel (3:2 aspect ratio), 1,036,000 dots
Battery680 mAh 7.2v Lithium-Ion rechargeable battery
Dimensions98.5 mm × 54.9 mm × 30.4 mm (3.88 × 2.16 × 1.20 inches)
WeightApprox. 204 g (7.2 oz) (camera body with battery and SD card)

The Panasonic Lumix DMC-GM1 was announced October 2013, as Panasonic's "pocketable", Micro Four Thirds compact mirrorless interchangeable lens camera. It features the same sensor as the GX7, AF detection range of -4 - 18 EV, focus peaking mode, an electronic shutter with speeds ranging from 60 - 1/16,000 sec, and Wi-Fi connectivity.

Panasonic claims the camera is the smallest among interchangeable lens cameras. It lacks some features found in competitors including a viewfinder, in-body image stabilization, a hotshoe, and NFC.[1]

See also

References

  1. Allison Johnson. "Panasonic Lumix DMC-GM1 Review". Retrieved January 15, 2014.
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