Speciale Inverno
Receivers a destare le maggiori sorprese. La grana dei pezzi è sempre bella spessa; il mood è sempre abbastanza oscuro; gli intarsi strumentali sempre eccelsi. Ma la resa è completamente diversa, merito anche dell?allargamento del gruppo da trio a quartetto con l?ingresso della chitarra di Sarah Lipstate e del batterista Joseph Wong in vece del dimissionario Christopher Weingarten.

Grado A: Il miglior grado con minima presenza o assenza di graffi superficiali, dotato di tutti gli accessori originali, nel caso di iPhone, caricabatterie, cavi e auricolari (non tutti i modelli). https://reggconfronto.com/miglior-250-g5 originale. Prezzi più elevati.
Grado B: Grado intermedio con lievi graffi superficiali che derivano dal normale utilizzo, scatola originale non sempre presente accessori idem.
Grado C: Grado peggiore, con graffi accentuati sulla scocca e sugli spigoli dovuti a cadute o altro, accessori originali quasi sempre assenti idem per la scatola originale, a volte possono avere una durata della garanzia più breve.Prezzi più economici.

The standard Gsits in the middle of the line and strikes the best balance of the bunch. https://reggconfronto.com/miglior-250-g5 . The phone has a 5.7-inch screen, but because it has a tall, 18:display, it isn?t all that wide. Couple that with a back that?s curved at the edges, and you end up with a relatively large screen inside of what feels like a small phone.
Moto G6.

The phone?s weakest point is its cameras. The selfie cam?s results are soft and muddy, a lot like what you?d get from the average webcam. On the back are two f/1.lenses on a 12-megapixel and 5-megapixel sensor, and the lower-resolution one is purely being used to add portrait mode effects. Portrait modes have issues on far more expensive phones, so I wasn?t expecting much here. The feature works, but it?s hard to imagine using it since the results look worse than a regular photo. I?d have much preferred Motorola put one good camera on the back of the phone than two mediocre ones.
In bright daylight, you can get some good shots out of the phone. But in anything other than ideal settings ? and often, even in ideal settings ? it would run into issues. The phone isn?t great at exposing shots that have both bright and dark areas at the same time. And in low-light, its photos become noisy or smudgy. The even bigger problem is that the camera is just too slow, leaving me with a lot of blurry pictures of my cat.
The Gis, for the most part, a pretty typical Android phone. It has a USB-C port, a headphone jack (!), and near-stock Android, augmented with just a handful of Motorola features. Those features range from slightly handy, like one that helps your screen stay on while you?re looking at it, to mostly inconsequential, like a gesture to shrink the screen down for one-handed use, which I never used. One of the more prominent additions is an ambient display that shows your notifications on a minimalist black-and-white screen when you flip the phone over. I found it to be more confusing than the normal lock screen. Fortunately, you can turn all of these features off.
The phone?s fingerprint reader is on the front beneath the screen, rather than on the back. I didn?t have a real problem with where it was located, but I do think scanners on the back are a more natural placement. Motorola does take advantage of offering gesture controls by using the fingerprint scanner as a touch surface, which can free up screen space by removing Android?s three control buttons, but the feature isn?t activated by default. They gestures work well, but I still found the on-screen controls to be more comfortable.
My one outstanding question with this phone is how its performance will hold up in the long run. Right now, it?s running great. Apps and webpages open quickly, and there?s usually no visible lag as I move from screen to screen ? not a given among phones at this price. But the Gis still using a lower-end processor, Qualcomm?s Snapdragon 450, which is likely to age quicker than a higher-end model. I can?t test how well it?ll perform in the long run in the scope of this review, but it?s something to consider if you were waffling between this phone or something more powerful.



It's perfectly compatible with the newest AF-P lenses as well as the old AF-I lenses.
It works with DX lenses, and automatically crops to the central part of its sensor (and shows a smaller frame in the finder) to give 19MP DX shots.
Many say that Nikon's greatest lenses are in its past, and for those, pretty much any Nikon lens ever made can work great on your D850, and give better results than it ever could have back on film.
Intervalometer
Use silent and exposure smoothing modes to let you shoot day-into-night time-lapses with automatic exposures for each frame. In this mode the D850 can meter exposures to much less than LV -3.

In-camera RAW batch-processing lets you shoot and save RAW images, and also let the camera convert them all to another format for faster work if making them into a time lapse later.
While Nikon's earlier PR suggested 8K time-lapse ability, in fact all the D850 does is shoot frames at its usual still resolution (which is more than 8K), but you then have to assemble these frames into time-lapse movie files using your own software on your own computer..