Skip to main content

YI enters mirrorless camera market with the M1 for beginner photographers

yi m1 mirrorless camera 2
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Young Innovators (YI) made a name for itself earlier this year with its 4K action camera, a device that went head-to-head with the GoPro Hero4 Black — for $200 less. Now, the China-based company is looking to the mirrorless interchangeable lens market with the M1, a Micro Four Thirds camera built around a 20-megapixel CMOS sensor from Sony.

While pricing and availability have yet to be announced, we expect the M1 to come in at the low end of the market. Unlike YI’s 4K action cam, the M1, for the most part, does not look to compete with the best interchangeable lens cameras but will likely offer significant value for the money.

yi-m1
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Built for simplicity and ease of use, the M1 uses a compact design that lacks an electronic viewfinder and makes do with a fixed, three-inch LCD. The camera is controlled almost entirely via touchscreen, with only two physical buttons on the body, according to Digital Photography Review. Built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Low Energy provide ample connectivity options for sharing images to a phone or tablet.

Related: YI 4K Action Cam Takes on GoPro Hero4 Black

In terms of performance, it features a maximum continuous shooting speed of five frames per second and an 81-point, contrast-detect autofocus system. While contrast-detect autofocus  that can operate in lighting levels as low as -4 EV. which rivals the best pro cameras out there.

yi-m1-black
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Interestingly, the M1 will shoot RAW images in the Adobe DNG format, an open standard that few other camera manufacturers have taken advantage of. This means it will be instantly compatible with editing software like Adobe Lightroom without having to wait for third-party RAW support.

In addition to 20-megapixel still photos, the camera will also shoot 4K video at 30p and 75mbps in the H.264 codec, not bad for a consumer-level camera.

The camera will ship with two lenses, a 42.5mm f/1.8, and a 12-40mm f/3.5-5.6. Including a fast prime lens in a kit is unique, though it lacks a functional manual focus ring, which again suggests YI is aiming solely at entry-level photographers with the M1.

Daven Mathies
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Daven is a contributing writer to the photography section. He has been with Digital Trends since 2016 and has been writing…
Intel Alder Lake-P may be almost 50% faster than the Apple M1 Max
Intel unveils the 12th Gen Intel Core processor

Intel Alder Lake for desktops has been performing well, and many are waiting for the mobile version to release, especially on the heels of Apple's new MacBook Pros.

While there are no Alder Lake-based laptops out yet, the first benchmarks have already started popping up. Nearly all of the tests show favorable results for the upcoming 12th generation of Intel's CPUs against some of its most important rivals.

Read more
The M1 Max MacBook Pro seems to have unbelievable video-editing prowess
Apple M1 Pro and Max logos.

When Apple announced the M1 Max chip at its Apple Unleashed event, we knew it would be a powerful processor. And a growing pile of leaked benchmarks is lending credibility to Apple's claims, with the M1 Max outperforming nearly all of the best laptops you can buy right now.

The most recent result comes from PugetBench for Premiere Pro -- a benchmark we use when testing machines ourselves. The result shows an M1 Max-equipped MacBook Pro with 64GB of RAM earning an overall score of 1,168. We're not sure if this is the 32-core or 24-core GPU model of the M1 Max, though the result suggests it's the former.

Read more
New benchmarks put Apple’s M1 Max above desktop graphics cards
apple m1 max chip

Apple's big claims about the performance capabilities of the M1 Pro and M1 Max seem to be legitimate as more benchmarks surface. This time, a Redditor found GFXBench scores for the M1 Max that place it at around 25% faster than the mobile Nvidia RTX 3070. This puts it in line with Apple's charts from its presentation.

Reddit user senttoschool posted the first M1 Max GFXBench scores in the r/Hardware subreddit. Obviously, it would be wise to be skeptical of these results for a couple of reasons. First, the submission on GFXBench was made utilizing Apple's Metal API, compared to the Nvidia and AMD results using OpenGL on Windows.

Read more