
Originally Posted by
dpreview
The Final Word
Ultimately, the 1 J1 and V1 have split personalities, and which one you end up confronting depends on what sort of photographer you are. If you're a member of the cameras' target audience and you want a point and shoot camera in its purest sense, you'll encounter the warm, welcoming and considerate faces of the J1 and V1 that quietly usher you away from the noisy, confusing and intricate world of exposure control and towards a clean, bright future where you only have one button to worry about - the shutter release.
If, however, you like being in charge of exposure settings and you enjoy exploring the breadth of a camera's feature set in day-to-day shooting, you'll probably dislike the J1 and V1's caginess when it comes to providing you with access to their key settings. You'll resent how protectively they squirrel away key settings like ISO and white balance inside their menu systems, and you'll balk at their insistence that the 'F' button cannot be customized.
From the point-and-shoot photographer's point of view though the V1 and J1 do some things very well. Motion Snapshot is fun, Smart Photo Selector can be invaluable, 60fps capture at 10MP is very useful in some situations and Hybrid AF offers impressively fast single-shot AF and consistent AF tracking at 10fps (assuming good light) in a way no other consumer camera has done before. We'd like to see this feature developed further but it's a big step in the right direction, and goes some way to answering one of the major un-met needs of compact camera buyers.
However, we can't help feeling that with the J1 and V1 Nikon has missed an opportunity to offer a product that fulfills that other great un-met point-and-shoot need: a small automatic camera that works well in a wide range of lighting conditions, from bright exterior to dim interior. 1 System performance in bright lighting conditions is excellent, but in average indoor lighting conditions a combination of hesitant contrast-detection AF and a poorly-programmed Auto ISO system that threatens blurry photos is a huge shame.
Also, although we try not to be influenced by a retail price when writing our reviews, it's impossible to ignore the fact that at street prices of around $600 and $800, respectively (with 10-30mm lens kit), the J1 and V1 are entry-level mirrorless cameras that cost significantly more than several higher-end alternatives. In most respects (but not all), larger-sensor mirrorless cameras such as the Sony NEX-C3 and NEX-5N, Olympus PEN E-PM1 and E-PL3, Panasonic Lumix DMC-GF3 and G3, and Samsung NX200 offer novice photographers more - and all of these cameras allow more space for their owners' ambitions to develop.
Right now by far the biggest advantage that either 1 System camera has over the competition is their adaptive hybrid AF systems. If you want to shoot moving subjects in good light with a small (ish) camera then the J1 and V1 really are the only game in town, at least as far as mirrorless models are concerned. If this sort of photography is not a priority for you, then given the strength of the competition it is very hard to recommend that you go out and buy either of these cameras.
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