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Sony announces the Alpha SLT-A57, an updated version of the original A55 dSLR that uses its innovative translucent fixed-mirror technology.
The 16.1 megapixel Sony SLT A57 digital SLT camera is aimed at a very discerning camera buyer: Goldilocks. Papa Bear might prefer the bigger, more complicated and more expensive A77; Mama Bear ...
The A57’s image sensor appears unchanged: it shoots with the same 16.1-megapixel APS-C CMOS sensor as the A55, and presumably, the same excellent sensor that’s inside the compact Sony NEX-5N ...
The new Sony SLT-A57 digital SLR, featuring translucent mirror technology, improves on its predecessor with faster, low noise image processing and a continuous shooting speed of 12 frames per second.
Sony's new A57 DSLR should be launching sometime next month, but if you just can't wait to see more about this camera, Engadget China recently got a chance to take it for a spin.
Sony’s latest $700 Alpha camera sure looks like a budget DSLR, huh? Well it is. But our hands-on today has us thinking it might just perform above its paltry price tag. The A57 handles as well ...
About a year and a half after introducing the Alpha A55 translucent mirror camera, Sony's putting that model out to pasture to make way for its replacement, the Alpha A57.
This week Sony have revealed the a57 A-mount camera with translucent mirror technology and a set of advanced features set to impress mainstream SLR users… ...
Sony has announced the A57, a 16-megapixel “SLT” camera. It’s the followup to 2010’s well-received A55, the first camera to employ Sony’s translucent mirror technology.
Sony is rumored to announce the Alpha A57 early tomorrow morning, March 13. The camera is expected to be priced at $699, to compete against the Canon 600D/T3i and the Nikon D5100.
Sony's first 2012 camera to have a transculent mirror is the Alpha A57, successor to the two-year-old A55 and available in stores in April. Shooting at 12 frames per second, it's a speedy model ...
Sony's new α57 DSLR camera is aimed at serious enthusiasts who are more interested in the outcome than the process.