The Olympus E3 is a big, heavy, 10.1-megapixel digital SLR with extensive advanced controls. The E3's flexibility starts with its bright, 2.5-inch color LCD, which swings away from the camera body and swivels. The E3 also has highly customizable controls. Dual selector dials--one on the back, one on the front--are now commonplace on digital SLRs. But you can reassign the E3's dials in a number of useful ways. You can, for example, set one of the dials to adjust the f-stop and the other to change the shutter speed.
You have to be serious about your photography, though--and have plenty of arm strength, too--because the bulky E3 body alone costs about $1700 and weighs just under 2 pounds. Adding the lenses adds to both the cost of the base camera ($1700 or so) and the heft: The 12mm-to-60mm (24mm-to-120mm, 35mm equivalent) zoom I received with the E3 costs around $900, and the body and lens together tip the scales at an arm-fatiguing 3.25 pounds.
Overall, the E3 feels comfortable to hold, and its magnesium body looks and feels durable--and ready for extensive time in the field. Operating the controls is quick and efficient. And unlike with many cameras, I could read the color LCD even while wearing dark sunglasses.
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