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CNET7 hours ago

Back in November, I spent £6,000 (about $8,100) of my own money on a Leica Q3 43. Over the last six months, it's been with me on multiple travels across Europe, and I've shot over 25,000 photos with it, including everything from street photography, travel, landscapes and even major editorial features. I've got some thoughts on these kinds of premium compacts and hopefully some solid shopping advice for any of you, whether you're considering this camera or another compact like the ever-popular Fuji X100VI.
Let's dive in.
I bought the Leica Q3 43 with my own money at full retail value, which at the time was just shy of £6,000 -- well, just over, including the second battery I also ordered. That's a huge amount of money, especially at a time when the purse strings are tightening and making big purchases -- especially non-essential ones like this -- are difficult to justify.
So, why did I want it?
Well, a number of reasons, and I'm hoping that any photographers out there will understand these, Leica fans or not. In recent years, I've found myself being a bit over-encumbered with gear that I've acquired in my 13 years taking photos professionally. Too many bags, tripods, lenses, lens adapters -- whatever -- and I increasingly wanted to take a more stripped-back approach to much of my photography.
Andrew Lanxon/CNET
For years, I've used the Sony RX1R as a compact, "take anywhere" camera when I don't want to take a bag full of kit. It's a stunning little full-frame premium compact that takes beautiful photos with its fixed 35mm lens. But it's 12 years old now, and it's showing its age, with slow, unreliable autofocus, relatively low resolution, and crucially, there's no viewfinder, so you have to shoot using the main screen and you look like a tourist. I've spent years fruitlessly hoping that Sony would replace it, but where Sony left a gap, Leica filled it.
The Q3 43 is, in some ways, its spiritual successor. It has a gorgeous full-frame sensor with an extremely high-quality fixed lens. It takes stunning images, and I can carry it with me pretty much all the time, keeping it slung around my neck, ready to shoot whenever I see an opportunity.
I took the Q3 43 to the Arctic and photographed out of the back of cars while speeding around a frozen lake. Fun times.
Volvo
It has a fixed 43mm lens, which may not suit everyone, but it's ideal for most of my work. I usually flit between 35mm and 50mm focal lengths, so 43mm is an ideal sweet spot between the two that I've never found limiting in the many photos I've captured with it. I tried the 28mm version of the camera and didn't get on with its wide-angle view.
I wrote recently about the three types of cameras photographers need to have, which include a workhorse, an everyday carry and a more artistic option, and while the Q3 43 has absolutely been all three for me, it's the second point where I feel it's had the biggest impact for me. It's not a camera that I have had to make any allowances for when carrying it around. I don't need a big photography backpack, just a small sling or messenger bag. Sometimes I've even gone out with it slung around my neck with no bag at all.
I absolutely love having a camera with me always. It's true that the best camera is the one you have with you, but it's doubly the case if the camera that's always with you is actually the best camera. Fine, it's not as small as my Sony RX1R, but it's smaller than my Canon R5, and it's been a great companion on photowalks around Stockholm, Edinburgh and Barcelona. It's a joy being able to quickly lift it up and fire away.
Having the camera always ready to go meant I could quickly capture moments like this.
Andrew Lanxon/CNET
It helps that it's simple to operate. I shoot mostly in aperture priority, twisting the dedicated aperture ring on the lens when I want to adjust the depth of field. I keep it mostly at ISO 400, and the camera is always pretty good at giving me the correct shutter speed for whatever scene I'm capturing.
At night, I have to crank that ISO hard, especially since the camera doesn't have a stabilized image sensor like my R5. In fact, on a technical level, the Q3 43 doesn't shape up super well, with both its burst rate and autofocus system being slower than rivals. Its subject detection is also best described as "hit or miss."
Using the Leica Q3 43 in Sweden was great. Its small size made it easy to always have with me.
Andrew Lanxon/CNET
But that's why I like this camera. I don't have to dive into the infinite abyss of the settings menu to figure out different autofocus options. I just keep this camera at single-point focusing, half-press the shutter to focus on whatever I want and then recompose to take the shot. Or I'll focus manually. It's a more basic shooting experience that encourages me to think more about the shot I'm taking and less about the settings I'm using to get it.
Then there are the built-in color profiles Leica offers, which I absolutely adore. I shoot almost everything using Leica's Chrome look, which does things to colors and contrast that I'm obsessed with. I mostly pair this with a warm white balance and, more recently, a PolarPro Gold Mist filter, which gives my images a warm, filmic vibe that I love. This filter almost never leaves my camera and is, for me, a must-have.
I love the tones that the camera can achieve, resulting in almost no post processing.
Andrew Lanxon/CNET
In fact, I now shoot most of my photos in JPEG and use them with almost no post-processing. That's in stark contrast to my way of working with the R5 -- I only ever shoot in raw on that camera, and all my images go through some level of work in Lightroom. Do I wish Leica offered options to tailor these profiles further in camera? Absolutely.
I treat the Q3 43 as a classic point-and-shoot compact camera. I use basic settings to shoot quickly and creatively, leaning on in-camera colors to minimize my time stuck editing. It's offered me a different way of working, and I've thoroughly enjoyed every moment I've spent with this camera so far.
The Q3 43 is small, but Sony's full frame RX1R is even smaller.
Andrew Lanxon/CNET
To be fair, it's not just the Leica Q3 43 that could give you this. Fujifilm's X100VI remains a social media darling thanks to its compact size and customizable film emulation modes, while the Ricoh GRIII is lauded by street and travel photographers for its blend of quality and pocketable size. I did consider buying the X100VI instead of the Leica, but I'll be honest, there is another element I'm perhaps less proud of admitting.
I wanted a Leica.
I don't like to think of myself as a status symbol sort of person, and while I have no desire for a Rolex, a yacht or a Lambo in my drive (OK, maybe a bit), I have always daydreamed about finally owning a camera that sports that iconic red dot on the front. I worried that it'd be a novelty that would quickly wear off, but it hasn't -- I still find myself excited to pick it up and take it somewhere. It also helps that the solid metal construction of the Q3 43 makes it feel infinitely more premium than the lightweight, arguably quite plasticky feel of the X100VI.
It gives me a creative buzz that I don't really get from my Canon R5. To lean on an analogy I've used before, the R5 is a worker's van; practical, it ticks the boxes for what they need to do a job. A professional tool for getting things done. But it's not the vehicle they fantasize about driving down the coast. The Leica is the fantasy car. A classic Ferrari, perhaps. It technically does most of the same things, but it does it in a very different way that makes you feel notably different when you use it.
A simple settings layout.
Andrew Lanxon/CNET
It may have been a lot of money to spend on a camera, especially one that I strictly speaking didn't need. It helped that Leica in the UK offers interest-free credit, so I actually spread the cost over 12 months, rather than dropping the cash all at once. But it's money I was -- and still am -- happy to spend.
It's given my photography a boost I didn't even know I needed. In the six months I've had it, I feel I've evolved more as a photographer, and I've taken images I'm incredibly proud of. I can't wait to see what the next six months with it will bring.

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Why Nebius Group Rocketed 62% Higher in May
Why Nebius Group Rocketed 62% Higher in May

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Why Nebius Group Rocketed 62% Higher in May

Nebius Group is one of the premier AI "neoclouds." It reported first-quarter earnings in May, with triple-digit hypergrowth, albeit off a small base. The company also invested in Toloka, a Jeff Bezos-funded AI data start-up. 10 stocks we like better than Nebius Group › Shares of up-and-coming "neocloud" Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) rocketed 61.7% in May, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Nebius was formerly known as Yandex, the "Russian Google." However, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the dawn of the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, the company divested its Russian assets and changed its name to Nebius Group in August 2024, with the goal of becoming an AI neocloud based in Europe. In May, Nebius reported its first-quarter 2025 results, showing strong hypergrowth, albeit off a very low base, due to its change in business model. Nebius also invested in a Jeff Bezos-backed AI start-up, perhaps adding to the enthusiasm. The strong results, which came on a generally very good month for AI tech companies, propelled Nebius to new heights. While Nebius' revenue is still quite small, it is just deploying all the cash it received from its divestments into new AI data centers adorned with Nebius' proprietary infrastructure servers. In his letter to shareholders, CEO Arkady Volozh noted that in the span of just three quarters, the company has expanded from one data center in Finland to now five across Europe, the U.S., and the Middle East. In the first quarter, Nebius grew revenue by 385% to $55.3 million, while adjusted (non-GAAP) net losses per share deepened by only 19%. Meanwhile, the company's annualized recurring revenue (ARR) grew at an even higher rate than revenue, up a whopping 684% to $249 million. Investors were also able to get a good sense of the company's future profit potential. While revenue grew 385%, Nebius' total gross, depreciation, and operating costs combined grew by only 96%. Given the strong results, on top of a strong recovery in AI tech stocks following the May 12 U.S.-China rollback of tariffs, it's no wonder Nebius had a strong month. In addition, on May 9, Nebius made a strategic majority investment in Toloka, an AI data solutions start-up backed by both Bezos Expeditions and Mikhail Parakhin, CTO of Shopify (NASDAQ: SHOP). Toloka is a best-in-class expert data provider, drawing from experts in over 50 fields, and is a generator of synthetic data. The company already counts top AI clouds as clients, which use Toloka's data to power their large language models. Not only did Nebius have a fine May, but it also skyrocketed another 29.4% in June, after London-based Arete Research analyst Andrew Beale initiated coverage on the stock with a whopping $84 price target -- more than double the stock's price at the time. Like peer CoreWeave, it appears Nebius is also at the front of the line when receiving Nvidia reference design systems. That should pave the way for continued strong growth. Still, with an $11.4 billion market cap, or 45 times its current ARR, Nebius' recent skyrocketing stock price appears to reflect a lot of this hypergrowth already. That being said, Arete Research's analyst apparently thinks its growth trajectory justifies that sky-high valuation -- and then some. Before you buy stock in Nebius Group, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Nebius Group wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $669,517!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $868,615!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 792% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 171% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 2, 2025 Billy Duberstein and/or his clients have no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Nebius Group, Nvidia, and Shopify. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Why Nebius Group Rocketed 62% Higher in May was originally published by The Motley Fool

Father's Day Gift Guide 2025: First-Class Experiences For Executives
Father's Day Gift Guide 2025: First-Class Experiences For Executives

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

Father's Day Gift Guide 2025: First-Class Experiences For Executives

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Cruise guests increasingly seek private, premier shore excursions
Cruise guests increasingly seek private, premier shore excursions

Travel Weekly

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  • Travel Weekly

Cruise guests increasingly seek private, premier shore excursions

Amid record-high spending for onboard and shoreside experiences since the pandemic, demand for premier and private shore excursions has reached new heights. Guests are increasingly seeking to spend time on land in a comfortable setting with only their immediate travel companions. That often means a private car rather than a tour bus and an itinerary tailored to their particular needs and cravings. Shore Excursions Group CEO Paul Kiritsy said that trend is growing in Europe in particular. It doesn't matter the ship size or whether it's contemporary or luxury, said Rinat Glinert of Venture Ashore, another third-party shore excursion provider. But there are two groups she's noticed who are particularly drawn to private experiences: travelers with accessibility challenges and families. Those groups find the convenience of a private driver and a tailored itinerary to be worth the extra expense, Glinert said. Tim Harwood, owner of MyExcursions, which specializes in higher-end, personalized experiences, said last year was the company's best ever. "A lot of people are still just looking for the personal experience to cover some of the main sites, but they don't want to step on a coach or they may be a little less mobile, and they want to have that comfort of knowing they can proceed at their own pace," he said. Cruise lines are seeing similar shore excursion trends. Christine Manjencic, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings' vice president of destination services operations, said the company has noticed a shift over the past few years in its guests' shore excursion patterns. "We are seeing them interested in small-group tours and more immersive excursions such as Go Local experiences where they can truly dive into the culture and history of the destination they are visiting," she said. "Our classic shore excursions where guests can see highlights of the destination with a large group are still popular among first-time visitors, but we are also seeing an increase in guests who prefer a more intimate and exclusive experience that enables them to get that perfect picture for their social media." Cruise excursions with culinary elements are popular, such as this visit to a vineyard in France. Photo Credit: Venture Ashore Culinary tours in high demand One particular type of experience appears to be gaining popularity: anything related to food. Whether it's cooking classes or a stop at a restaurant with a particularly scenic vista, guests are looking to taste the flavor of a destination on their brief stop off of the ship, said Glinert of Venture Ashore and Harwood of MyExcursions. "I think that's one of the things that really connects you to a destination," Glinert said. "You have those core memories of something that you did that was speaking to more than just your sense of sight, so I think there's a lot there that's building in the culinary space. We've got requests for people who want to go truffle hunting. All kinds of stuff." Guests spending more on excursions The interest in more premium excursions, and excursions overall, coincides with continued increased spending. Sometimes guests spend more on excursions than the cruise itself, Glinert said. "They're really looking for something that is going to elevate their cruise experience, and they're willing to pay for that," she said. Shore Excursions Group, which recently sold its 5 millionth tour, has seen the average order value increase by nearly 40% since the pandemic, Kiritsy said. The company pays commissions and has tracked an increase in travel advisor sales after integrating its own marketing into popular booking platforms advisors use like Odysseus, Revelex and VacationPort. The group's sales are up 50% from such platforms, thanks to a 200% increase in advisors activating Shore Excursions Group offers, Kiritsy said. All of this means excursions are selling out more quickly and bookings are happening earlier, Kiritsy said. For Caribbean excursions, guests are booking an average of 10 weeks prior to sailing, and in destinations like Alaska and Europe, it's 14 weeks prior, he said. In Europe, new restrictions on vehicle sizes for accessing certain sites have also caused excursions to book up because they simply can't accommodate as many people as they previously could, Glinert said. Shore Excursions Group is suggesting that advisors book excursions early to ensure clients have the experiences they want, Kiritsy said. "Once the cruise is booked and you know where you're going, we definitely recommend securing the excursions," he said. "They definitely will sell out, and you don't want to miss out on the best excursions in each of those ports."

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