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The Verge

Microsoft’s carbon emissions went up 25 percent last year Fidji Simo steps down from leading OpenAI’s AGI work due to illness Netflix reportedly considers adding always-on channels The ChatGPT browser is already dead The floatable, powerful Soundcore Boom 2 speaker is over half off Google will now tell you if an ad was made with AI Google’s Nest Thermostat has hit its best price of the year OpenAI rolls out GPT-5.6 after government greenlight — and announces ‘ChatGPT Work’ Microsoft’s patch Tuesdays are about to get bigger Schlage’s Sense Pro unlocks the door so I don’t have to Sonos Ace wireless headphones are steeply discounted The PocketMage resurrects the PDA with an e-paper screen Pipes dream: Why Comcast gave up on NBC Meta says its new AI model is ready to compete on coding ICE agents are making house calls for online critics Say hello to Claude Wrapped Character.AI wants a piece of the microdrama pie FL Studio 2026 turns its AI chatbot into your assistant engineer SpaceX is on track for record-setting Starlink deployments Meta is reportedly working on smart glasses that would be recording all the time Get a $30 credit when you reserve Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy phones Microsoft’s Xbox reset is pivoting Obsidian to make Fallout instead of Avowed America’s cheapest new EV is smaller than a ping-pong table and tops out at 19mph Cockroaches will learn to fear my SwitchBot Bot Rechargeable If Microsoft sold off Xbox, who would even buy it? Twelve South’s AirFly Pro is a great travel companion, and it’s on sale for $40 ChatGPT’s upgraded voice mode is better at shutting up This jumping $800 robot camera dog filled me with joy The whole Pixel line could get more expensive this year
Sony brings back the superzoom RX10 with a stacked sensor and a high price
Antonio G. Di Benedetto · 2026-07-09 · via The Verge

Sony is bringing back the RX10 superzoom camera after a nearly nine-year gap between models. The newly announced RX10 V retains the same 24-600mm equivalent f/2.4-4 Zeiss Vario-Sonnar 25x zoom lens of its last two predecessors, but it has lots of upgrades elsewhere. The new 20.1-megapixel 1-inch-type sensor is a stacked design, allowing up to 30fps continuous burst shooting without any blackout (up from the last-gen’s 24fps). That’s a nice improvement for a camera aimed at action, sports, and wildlife photography, but it will come at a steep cost of $2,299.99 when the camera launches in early August.

The RX10 IV launched at $1,700 in 2017. And, to be fair to the RX10 V, the pricing for the new model isn’t completely off the mark if you adjust for inflation. But what you get with the RX10 V isn’t just a sensor upgrade — the body has been revised to look and feel like Sony’s larger Alpha mirrorless cameras. It uses the same NP-FZ100 battery found in most current A-series models, offering over 50 percent more battery capacity.

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It really does look like a Sony Alpha from the front.

The new RX10 V also inherits many noteworthy features and specs from its larger Alpha cousins, like an OLED electronic viewfinder, 4K 60p full-width video recording (4K 120p when cropped) with S-Log3 and S-Cinetone color options, and Sony’s top-notch real-time autofocus tracking system. Like larger Sony Alphas, the RX10 V has 575 autofocus points and can detect subjects as well as the human form — to better locate and latch onto faces and eyes during fast movement. It even has the Speed Boost function that debuted in the pro A9 III camera, allowing you to shoot at faster burst rates for short stints when you need it.

Since the RX10 IV came well before using a large camera as a webcam was a thing, the RX10 V now supports livestreaming at up to 4K 30p via a USB-C connection (with simultaneous recording) — which is ideal because its video-out port is still a flimsy Micro HDMI connector. While most of what’s new about the RX10 V is an upgrade over the last gen, the new model sadly lost a couple features: The lens no longer has a built-in ND filter and there’s no pop-up flash. Bummer.

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ISO 800, 1/1000s, f/5.6. Adobe support for the camera’s .ARW files is not live yet, so here are a bunch of JPGs I took in my limited time with the RX10 V. These are pretty much straight from the camera, aside from some cropping on this image and the next two.

I got to briefly test the RX10 V for a few days, and despite the reused lens, I came away impressed. It really does feel like a Sony Alpha camera with a big built-in telephoto zoom — though much smaller and lighter than attaching a huge lens to a full-frame mirrorless Alpha. I’m no birder or nature photographer (the longest lens I personally own is a 135mm), but Sony’s excellent autofocus and 30fps blackout-free burst shooting made it pretty easy to photograph birds in trees around my backyard or macro shots of bees moving from flower to flower. There’s a lot this lens and fast-shooting sensor can do. Of course, if you’re like me and used to full-frame cameras, you have to slightly dial down your expectations when it comes to sharpness and resolution — a 1-inch-type sensor is versatile, but it doesn’t hold up to the same pixel-peeping scrutiny.

The RX10 V seems aimed at deep-pocketed casual shooters who want a camera to take traveling without lugging around a bag full of lenses. In my years spent behind a counter selling superzoom cameras just like it (even the original RX10), the demographic was almost always parents photographing their kids’ sporting events or looking to take a versatile camera on vacation. But at $2,300, it might be more for a recently retired grandma or grandpa than it is for a couple 30-somethings with a kindergartener.

Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

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  • Antonio G. Di Benedetto