E-3 provides several useful functions. First, its flip-and-twist LCD-Live makes viewing useful in cases where a fixed LCD can not cut it (such as this shot). On the other hand, it allows you to preview the image stabilizer effect. (The inability to see the stabilized image remains one of the advantages of optical implementations over the sensor to change.) But at the 2.5-inch, LCD is also kind of small and not very high resolution, sufficient for an accurate manual focusing. Like other models of E-3 can supply reinforced by the support for manual focus in Live View, but the slow display update - you'll have to wait for display to catch up with you - can bog down shooting. Finally, when you enter Live View, a message appears on the screen reminding you to flip the switch on the viewfinder cover (to prevent leakage of light). On the one hand, cover a large built-in touch, that all dSLRs, probably should have. On the other hand, it displays a reminder pigs valuable seconds when you wait shoot.I usually have a functioning Olympus "My two ways of user presets bit cumbersome to create banks, compared with almost nothing on similar. Available settings are not neatly arranged in a submenu for you choose between, you must set the camera and then record the settings for one of the banks. There is no screen, which briefly now set for you.

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