LX10 |
And
the camera it could and should have been
September
2016
At Photokina this year
Panasonic announced several cameras.
One of these is the LX10/15 billed by Panasonic as
“The ultimate compact camera”, with a “polished look” and a “sleek compact
body”.
The blurb continues with …..“The aperture ring allows
direct intuitive control of the aperture”….
I was looking forward to this camera’s arrival but am
now disappointed. They messed up the ergonomics.
This post is not a review of the camera but some observations
and comments about its ergonomics based on photos, early hands-on reviews and
my experience with advanced compact cameras.
I feel reasonably confident that Panasonic will do a decent
job with the picture quality, lens, autofocus and performance.
My concerns are with some obvious ergonomic mistakes
which in my view should never have been allowed to appear in a supposedly
advanced compact camera from a major manufacturer.
From the left, TZ80, Mockup, RX100(4) Each fits comfortably in a Lowe Pro Portland 20 belt pouch. |
Market
position
In the age of ever more sophisticated smartphones
there are still some people who prefer to use a camera for taking photos.
* Many of these are expert/enthusiast users who enjoy
the process of operating a well designed camera and will be mightily alienated
if the device is not well designed as unfortunately is the case with the LX10. Online forums already have posts from
disappointed users.
* These people want a camera which is really compact,
able to be carried in a pocket or small pouch on a belt so it is ready for use
at any time.
* It must make better photos than a smartphone.
* It must have very good performance especially in low
light levels and with sometimes difficult subjects such as children at play.
TZ80, Mockup, RX100(4) rear view |
The
scaling problem
Cameras do not scale up or down. The designer cannot
effectively take a design and scale it up or down and expect it to have an
efficient user interface.
This appears self evident to me as the hands which
operate the device stay the same size.
The corollary to this is that very small cameras need
a fresh approach to design.
Unfortunately camera designers appear not to
understand this so we repeatedly see very small models which have a control
layout just like larger models. The result is tiny buttons, cramped holding
surfaces, and fiddly operation.
The
Proper Camera
I take the view that to be worth buying and using, a
camera must be different from a smartphone. The process of using a camera needs
to be distinctly different from that of a smartphone.
If not what is the point ?
My concept of the Proper
Camera encapsulates the attributes I think a camera must have.
These are:
* A decent handle and thumb support so the user can
get a grip on the thing
* A fixed always ready EVF (not pop-up)
* A fully articulating monitor
* A Mode Dial
* Twin control dials
* A JOG lever to move the active AF area instantly
* A zoom lens
* Built in flash
* A full set of hard controls for the
expert/enthusiast user.
LX10 ergonomic mistakes
1. There is no EVF and no way to fit one. The Sony
RX100(Mk 3 and 4) each have a built in EVF. I have a Mk4 and I can confirm that
this is better than no EVF but not as user friendly as a fixed, always ready
type. I live in Sydney Australia where
bright sunny conditions are normal making image preview almost impossible with
the monitor on any camera.
It seems likely that the EVF was omitted to keep
the body size down. I understand this
but would very much prefer a slightly larger body with an EVF.
As it stands the LX10 is not a competitor for the
RX100(3/4).
2. The aperture ring is a big mistake.
* This camera has a Mode
Dial and two control dials. My studies on similar cameras (such as the TZ100
and LX100) show that changing aperture with a control dial requires fewer
actions, each less complex than performing the same task using an aperture
ring.
* The design of the ring
fitted to the LX10 is most unsatisfactory. The only way for the fingers of the
left hand to get sufficient purchase to turn the ring is by engaging with the
two small serrated lands. The relationship
of these lands to the fingers of the left hand will be different for each
aperture setting and for landscape or portrait orientation, left hand over or
left hand under holding style.
The aperture ring on the
LX100 has the same dismally inadequate detail design. As a result I almost
always used this camera in P Mode. Working the aperture ring was just so
awkward.
(and working the shutter
speed dial was worse so I rarely tried to use Shutter Priority AE)
Yes, I know people spring
to the defence of the aperture ring on user forums and say they think it is a good
idea. But I wonder if these people actually use the camera or just talk about
it in an abstract fashion.
* The lens aperture
varies with focal length. So if an aperture between f1.4 and f2.8 is set on the
ring it will often be wrong depending on the focal length. If you set f1.4 then
zoom out to the longest focal length the actual lens aperture will be f2.8 but
f1.4 is showing on the ring.
The whole idea of an aperture ring on a modern
electronic camera with a variable aperture zoom is ergonomic nonsense.
3. There is no
proper handle and the front of the body is smooth like the TZ100. In their
efforts to make the body “sleek” they have made it difficult to hold. In my
view there is no excuse for this sort of styling affectation. Do people buy
this thing because it looks “sleek” ? I
don’t know, maybe some do but the result is an ergonomic kludge.
4. The monitor swings up but not down. That on the
RX100(4) swings both ways. Fully
articulated would be even better. A
swing down monitor is very handy for overhead shots.
5. The 4way controller is not one of Panasonic’s best
designs. In the photos it appears to be very similar to that used in the TZ100
which is just serviceable but the type used on the FZ1000 is the same size but
much easier to locate and operate by feel.
6. In his ‘First Impressions” review of the LX10 on
Digital Photography Review Richard Butler makes the following observations:
……The second odd decision is the way Panasonic makes use of the
camera's command dial on its right-hand shoulder. In manual and shutter
priority mode it controls shutter speed. In program mode it controls program
shift. In aperture priority mode? Nothing.
But that's fine, you can customize its function to be exposure
compensation. Well, fine until you move back to shutter priority mode or
manual, at which point can no longer change the shutter speed. At all.
And just to top it all off, Panasonic is the only manufacturer
remaining that won't let you use exposure comp in manual mode with Auto ISO, so
the dial suddenly becomes non-functional.
This failure by
Panasonic to allow the user to allocate sensible functions to the control dials
is completely incomprehensible to me. Did the people allocating dial functions
ever use the camera ?
7. Last, Panasonic perseveres with its 20th
Century auto ISO algorithms in the 21st Century. It is way past time
Panasonic fixed this to allow ISO and therefore shutter speed to vary with lens
focal length and to allow the user to set a minimum shutter speed for each
focal length.
There
is a better way
Over the last five years I have made 13 plywood mockup
cameras to test my ideas about ergonomic aspects of design. When making a mockup I specify a set of dimensions then evolve the
shape by experimenting with different configurations. So for instance if I find
a handle is not right I remove it and start over. I do not determine the shape with drawings
but by experimenting with the relationship between various shapes and the
functional anatomy of my hands and the hands of other family members.
My answer to the problem of the small-enough-to-be-pocketable advanced compact camera is shown in the
mockup seen in this post.
I realised very early in the design development
process that simply shrinking a larger model would not be satisfactory. So I
took a different approach to produce a design which is still clearly a camera
but with a user interface which I have not seen on any existing camera to date.
The mockup provides a secure hold on the device with a
substantial, carefully shaped handle and thumb support. All the buttons and dials
are decently large and easy to find by feel and operate.
It has a Mode Dial + twin control dial layout. The
control dials are easy to find and operate by feel without having to change
grip with either hand.
The built in EVF has a vertical height of 14.5mm which
is sufficient for a decently functional viewing experience.
There is a substantial JOG lever correctly placed for
easy access by the right thumb without having to move any other finger. The JOG
lever allows direct control of the AF area position in capture phase of use and
has the usual functions of a 4 way controller in other phases of use such as
scrolling around menus.
There is a built in flash unit and the monitor
articulates. I suspect that in practice a fully articulating monitor might
require an extra 2-3 mm depth in the body of the camera. The monitor is slightly smaller than that on
the Sony RX100(4) but quite adequate I think.
The final shape
and configuration of this mockup arose from basic ergonomic principles guided
by the functional anatomy of human hands and an understanding of the tasks
required to operate a modern electronic camera and the actions required to
carry out those tasks.
It is ergonomically and functionally coherent. It was made possible by thinking outside the
usual box which appears to constrain camera design in the current era.
It is only marginally larger than the Sony RX100(4)
but in production would provide a very much better user experience.
Obviously the mockup looks a bit rough but it would
clean up quite well in a production version.
As to the shape and the “style”, form follows function
as it should.
If the camera makers had the courage to step just a
little outside the conventional envelope with a production model like this
mockup, I think they would be pleased by the positive response from consumers.
Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts on this. I completely agree. Hopefully someone will listen!
ReplyDeleteA socket for a "normal" shutter release would also be good. I'm not into the control-by-phone thing.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work.