A week ago I got my A6000 at a trade show (with 10% discount) and the 16-70 too.
It is an adjunct to my A7R. Fortunately, there was also a raptor show the next day. This was a great opportunity to see how good tracking works. Here is a series of a flying barn owl. The 6 pictures that show the owl in flight are out of 10 pictures taken in less than 1 second! Tracking really works very well. The challenge is to follow the bird in such a short time.
A6000, E 16-70 F4
Got the 18-105mm G today. It has crazy distortion throughout the zoom range, but the in-camera and LR profiles take care of it quite well, so you never have to see it. Even with the distortion correction, it's got quite good image quality. It's weakest at 18mm, but even still fairly good there. Quite sharp through the rest of the range, even wide open. Kind of amazing to have f/4 constant through such a broad zoom range. It's big, but pretty light.
Here's one shot at 60mm, f/13, 1/6 second handhelld:
Two from tonight with the NEX-6 and Zeiss 16-70. Of course, with the super slow shutter speed of the second, I could have used a coke bottle for the same effect.
Season of Summer Light Week 23, Saturday - Wood sorrels and some blue flowers
"I just love the quality of SEL50F18 (50mm/1.8 E-mount lens). This was originally a full body shot with some empty space on top of Aura. What you see is a pretty extreme 3,2 Mpix crop from the center. Still pretty good quality. [...]"
@Joekraft: You CAN have the histogram in lvie view AND view it while you turn the exposure wheel, too.
Trick is to turn of the "exposure guide" function, otherwise the histogram disappears. One of those undocumented interactions, this camera is so fully stuffed with functions that a good manual surely would help a lot.
All together, the A6000 is not perfect, but a tremendous great camera