I don’t keep up on every detail around Sony, but I noticed that Sony offers an option besides my recommendation of CaptureOne for Sony (or CaptureOne Pro). If any readers have had great results with this feature, then I’d love for you to post links to your favorite shots on my Facebook page alongside the post for this review. I did not try the Pixel Shift Multi Shooting feature on this camera or the III, even though it sounds interesting. Other than that, really this feels like mostly the same camera now with loads more megapixels. Lastly the lock button on the exposure compensation is a welcome addition to avoid accidental changes. My favorite feature – eye AF – now works without requiring special setup or holding a button and even features support for specifying which eye it should focus on or you can still have it decide using the auto feature. You can read about all of the big features on Sony’s website, but my real world observations were that the viewfinder is definitely very good and the joystick feel is now excellent. Read on to see if more is better or if Sony ruined a good thing. After all it had gained almost 19 more megapixels and had performance improvements that were sure to make it better, right? I was literally blown away with it, so I was a bit shocked when the IV came out and I started hearing rumblings of it being inferior to its predecessor. When I reviewed the Sony a7R III in 2017 I declared it my camera of the year. Shown with Sony FE 24-105mm f/4 G OSS Lens Sony Alpha a7R IV Mirrorless Digital Camera at B&H
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