What's New?
Fujifilm says the X100S has fully 70 improvements over the X100, some major (like the sensor), some relatively minor. Here we pick out some of the most important from the list, but in short, it appears that many of the X100's remaining irritations have been addressed. Note though that we haven't seen a working model yet, so don't know how well the camera actually behaves in practice.
Operability improvements
Fujifilm says it has made a whole host of small improvements to the X100S's controls. Physical designs and layouts have been tweaked, and it appears that lots more button customization will be available (although we'll need to see a working camera to understand what this really means).
Rear control layout
The early X100S Fujifilm that showed us had the same rear control layout as the X100, but the production camera will have much the same changes as as the X20. The physical layout of the buttons and dials is unchanged, but the AF area selection and drive mode functions have swapped places (making it much easier to change the active AF point with the camera to your eye). The RAW button has been re-labelled Q, to reflect its new primary function of accessing the on-screen quick menu. Fujifilm is also promising that the much-criticised Menu/OK button offers 'improved operability'. Click here for a rear view of the X100S.
Performance improvements
The X100S's new sensor and processor add up to improved performance specs compared to the X100. Here's Fujifilm's own comparison between the two:
- Improved AF speed: 0.07 sec in good light (10EV), compared to 0.22 sec for X100
- Quicker startup (0.9 sec vs 2 sec)
- Faster continuous shooting (6 fps vs 5 fps)
- Substantially larger buffer, 31 frames vs 10 frames (JPEG Large/Fine)
- Improved shot-to-shot time in single shot drive mode (0.5 sec vs 0.9 sec)
- Can immediately switch to playback mode after shooting (no need to wait for file to write to card)
- Buttons that were unresponsive immediately after shooting are now fixed
Image processing options
The X100S gains the 'Pro Neg' film simulation options previously seen on the X-Pro1 and X-E1, which are particularly aimed at giving neutral results for portrait photographers. At the other end of the scale, it also gets a range of special effects 'Advanced filters'.
- 'Pro Neg Std' and 'Pro Neg Hi' film simulation settings
- Customisable film simulation bracketing
- 8 'Advanced Filter' processing options (Toy Photo, Miniature, Pop Colour, Soft Focus, Dynamic Tone, High Key, Low Key, Partial Colour)
Enhanced movie functionality
The X100's video mode was basic to say the least, but the X100S boasts much improved specs. Movies are still a bolt-on to what's fundamentally a stills camera, and accessed as a drive mode (there's no 'red button' in sight here). Note there's still no image stabilization, optical or electronic, so hand-held movies will be jittery.
- 1080p 60fps Full HD recording, with 36Mbps bitrate (compared to X100's 720p 24fps)
- Phase-detect AF effective for movie shooting
- X-Trans colour filter reduces moiré and false colour
- AF-S focus mode available (only AF-C and MF on X100)
Miscellaneous changes
Fujifilm has also made a number of detail changes, many of which may look obscure but will be warmly welcomed by X100 owners. Some of the most notable here are that the live histogram now functions properly in manual exposure mode, and the minimum shooting distance using the optical finder to has been reduced to 50cm.
- 14bit RAW output
- Max ISO in Auto mode increased to 6400
- Auto ISO moved to shooting menu (from Set-up)
- Protective coating on viewfinder window, to keep OVF clear of fingerprints
- Minimum shooting distance using OVF reduced to 50cm (from 80cm on X100)
- Minimum focus in normal shooting reduced to 21cm (from 40cm)
- Shutter count function (updates every 100 shots, accessed from menu)
- Battery chamber redesigned to prevent wrong-way-round insertion
- 1:1 aspect ratio added (alongside 3:2 and 16:9)
- Camera retains (as opposed to resets) all settings after firmware update
- Eye-Fi card support
- Improved support for SD cards used with Apple computers
- Live histogram adapts to current settings in manual exposure mode
- Strap lugs are double-plated for increased durability











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