I have narrowed it down to the sony a6000 with 16-70 zeiss or sony rx100 m3. I did several wide and tele shots and the differences were so minor that I had a hard time telling the difference. I just want a decent camera to get couple shots of my wife and I enjoying the parks. The rx100 is great but it seems so small in my hands and the sony is nice but I expected a larger jump in quality that I just am not seeing. Maybe I am expecting too much but there was quite a bit of noise at iso 1600 on the a6000.
A few notes on the A6000 at high ISO - it actually should be one of the top performers in APS-C - but it might take a few things to set up right first. There are 3 noise reduction settings - off, low, and normal/high...at the highest setting, there may be a lot less noise, but also some smearing of details from the noise reduction. At off, you get max detail but also max noise, for those who like to remove it themselves. I like the low setting myself - rarely have to touch the JPGs, and if shooting RAW, it doesn't much matter as you do the NR yourself.
Remember when viewing the photos to check for noise that when you're 'pixel-peeping', you're zoomed in to a 24MP photo, which means you're looking at an amazingly small subsection of the photo at 100% viewable. Those used to 16MP sensors or lower sensors might not realize just how much more zoomed in you are, how blown up the photo is, at 24MP 100% viewable. I shot with the NEX-5N, which at 16MP was widely considered to be one of the best APS-C sensors for high ISO on the market, and still today one of the best. My A6000 performs better, holds more detail, has less noise, and can shoot at high ISOs - by easily 1 full stop, if not more. I was pretty much at ISO6400 for the usable limit on the NEX-5N, and the A6000 is at 12,800 for the usable limit, with forays even higher as needed.
I shoot JPG most often, and generally I do not have to do any post processing on shots from ISO100 to 6400, and only apply light processing to any ISO above 6400 all the way to 12800. If you get the exposure right, and don't underexpose, the A6000 should be very comfortable shooting at anything up to ISO6400 with very little noise and excellent detail retention. I probably shoot more often at high ISO than most people do - I do a lot of handheld night photography, low light wildlife shooting, etc...so I'm probably shooting nearly 40% of the time at ISO1600 to 12800 with the A6000.