User manual
Table Of Contents
- Cover
- Introduction
- Getting Started and Basic Camera Operations
- Charging the Battery
- Installing and Removing the Battery
- Installing and Removing the Card
- Using the LCD Monitor
- Turning on the Power
- Setting the Date, Time, and Zone
- Selecting the Interface Language
- Attaching and Detaching a Lens
- Basic Shooting Operations
- Quick Control for Shooting Functions
- Menu Operations and Configurations
- Operating the Camera with Touch Screen
- Formatting the Card
- Before You Start
- Displaying the Grid in the Viewfinder
- Displaying the Electronic Level
- Setting the Viewfinder Information Display
- Button Functions
- Setting the Multi Function Lock
- Setting the Shooting Mode Guide
- Setting the Feature Guide
- Help
- Basic Shooting
- Fully Automatic Shooting (Scene Intelligent Auto)
- Full Auto Techniques (Scene Intelligent Auto)
- Creative Auto Shooting
- Special Scene Mode
- Shooting Portraits
- Shooting Group Photos
- Shooting Landscapes
- Shooting Moving Subjects
- Photographing Children
- Panning
- Shooting Close-ups
- Shooting Food
- Shooting Candlelight Portraits
- Shooting Night Portraits (With a Tripod)
- Shooting Night Scenes (Handheld)
- Shooting Backlit Scenes
- Quick Control
- Setting the AF and Drive Modes
- Image Settings
- Setting the Image-Recording Quality
- Setting the Aspect Ratio
- Setting the ISO Speed for Still Photos
- Selecting a Picture Style
- Customizing a Picture Style
- Registering a Picture Style
- Setting the White Balance
- White Balance Correction
- Auto Correction of Brightness and Contrast
- Setting Noise Reduction
- Highlight Tone Priority
- Correction of Lens Aberrations due to Optical Characteristics
- Reducing Flicker
- Setting the Color Space
- Creating and Selecting a Folder
- File Numbering Methods
- Setting Copyright Information
- GPS Settings
- Advanced Operations for Photographic Effects
- Program AE
- Shutter-Priority AE
- Aperture-Priority AE
- Manual Exposure
- Selecting the Metering Mode
- Setting the Desired Exposure Compensation
- Auto Exposure Bracketing (AEB)
- Locking the Exposure for Shooting (AE Lock)
- Long (Bulb) Exposures
- HDR (High Dynamic Range) Shooting
- Multiple Exposures
- Mirror Lockup
- Interval Timer Shooting
- Using the Eyepiece Cover
- Remote Control Shooting
- Using a Remote Switch
- Flash Photography
- Shooting with the LCD Monitor (Live View Shooting)
- Shooting Movies
- Image Playback
- Image Playback
- Shooting Information Display
- Index display (Multiple-image Display)
- Jump Display (Jumping Through Images)
- Filtering Images for Playback
- Magnifying Images
- Playing Back with the Touch Screen
- Rotating the Image
- Protecting Images
- Setting Ratings
- Quick Control for Playback
- Enjoying Movies
- Playing Back Movies
- Editing a Movie’s First and Last Scenes
- Slide Show (Auto Playback)
- Viewing Images on a TV Set
- Erasing Images
- Adjusting the LCD Monitor Brightness
- Setting the Auto Rotation of Vertical Images
- Post-Processing Images
- Sensor Cleaning
- Print order and Photobook Set-up
- Customizing the Camera
- Reference
- Software Start Guide / Downloading Images to a Computer
218
Geotag information*
1
(latitude,
longitude, elevation) and coordinated
universal time*
2
can be appended to
images.
Shooting locations of geotagged
images can be displayed on a map on
a computer.
*1: Certain traveling conditions or GPS settings may cause inaccurate geotag
information to be added to images.
*2: Coordinated Universal Time, abbreviated as UTC, is essentially the same as
Greenwich Mean Time.
You can use the GPS logging function to automatically record the route
the camera travels by logging location information at set intervals. The
location information for the route the camera has traveled can be
viewed on a map displayed on a computer.
* Certain traveling conditions, locations, or GPS settings may cause inaccurate
geotag information to be added to images.
The time information obtained from GPS signals can be set on the
camera.
GPS Features
Geotagging Images
Logging the Route Traveled
Setting the Camera Time
The GPS information recorded to the images and movies may include
information that can personally identify yourself. Therefore, be careful when
giving geotagged still photos or movies to other people or displaying them
online to the public.