>>3768390The automatic modes are damn good, battery life is now comparable to dslr, color science and menus have been improved but still may be problematic. You will love and/or hate the camera.
For me, Sony cameras are not quickly adjusted. They are technical, powerful, but the more you try to max them out or configure them for a situation, the more sluggish they are to adapt. The high possibility of configuration makes up for the complication, so that you can choose the settings that suit you best. I encounter limitations, more precisely, mutually blocking modes that cannot be used simultaneously.
I still have to configure and try the camera in a basic but easy to use setup, leaving out everything that can be unreliable or wayward, such that I only program simple af, drive, iso, metering, exposure sutff but no parallel configuration i.e. no fallback solutions.
In general one should say that the eye autofocus is nice but has problems with backlight and twilight. Milc autofocus generally has problems in dark environments rather early.
I personally struggle a bit with the handling: the autofocus is most reliable when it has a high degree of freedom and can work on large surfaces. But with the large degree of freedom you give away more/too much control over what the camera should focus on. This may not play a role, it can be a burden for unstaged, situational moments.