MEMORY CARD ADDS WI-FI TO YOUR CAMERA
Digital cameras continue to be one of the hottest selling
consumer electronic items. It's no wonder that more and more
accessories for them continue to be developed. Digital picture
frames are a hot ticket item as well. After all, they're a great way
to display the images we take. Another way digital shutterbugs can
show off their images is on the web. There are dozens of website
services that let you share your images online such as Flickr,
Shutterfly, Snapfish and Facebook just to name a few.
Digital cameras have eliminated the tedium of film cameras. No
longer do we have to remove used film cartridges, wind in new ones
and ship them off to be developed. Yet there is still one bit of
digital tedium that remains; the offloading of images from the
camera to the computer.
When you are ready to offload the pictures you've taken, you first
have to physically attach the camera to your computer via the
supplied USB cable. Then unless the camera is set up to look like an
attached hard drive so you can drag and drop the images from one
location to another, you usually have to run some kind of
application that lets you dump all of them to the computer or select
the images you want to offload. After that you can once again feel
creative by grouping the ones you want, adding titles, captions and
generally having fun with all of them. So let's take a closer look
at that boring offloading process for a moment. What if you didn't
have to do that anymore? What if you could just point, shoot and
your images would automatically be downloaded to your computer
without any wires? Even better, what if you could just download them
directly to the web, directly to any of those picture websites I
mentioned? Or best of all, what if you could do both at the same
time? Well now you can.
With Eye-Fi, you just snap the pictures and automatically have them
delivered to both your computer and the website without any wires.
The Eye-Fi is a 4 or 8 gigabyte SD type memory card that replaces
your camera's existing memory card. But what makes this memory card
stand out in the crowd is that it also has 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi built
in. But it's more than just built-in Wi-Fi that makes the whole
thing work.
The Eye-Fi is a well thought out system that takes you through the
easy setup. Included with the little SD card is a USB memory card
reader. This is used as part of the setup procedure. To begin, you
first insert the Eye-Fi SD card into the reader and plug that into
your computer's USB port. From there, the built-in application lets
you set up the Eye-Fi to detect and access your wireless network,
configure password entry for security, and select where and how you
want the Eye-Fi to deliver your images. The Eye-Fi is pretty
flexible with its options and will let you access most Wi-Fi
networks, even the ones that require you to log in via an initial
web browser splash screen.
Once you have your Eye-Fi setup and registered with the Eye-Fi
service, you remove the card from the reader, insert it into your
digital camera and you're ready to go. Now all you have to do is
take pictures. If you are within your Wi-Fi network's range, your
pictures will be instantly uploaded to your computer, your website
or both depending on how you configured it.
Images will be sent as complete JPEG files to your computer but
depending on the web service you select, images may be scaled
automatically to fit the required format constraints.
The Eye-Fi works only with cameras that use the SD format memory
cards, and is compatible with both Windows and Macintosh computers.
Some of the newer camera models are now set up to automatically
detect the Eye-Fi card. These cameras sport additional controls and
indicators that feature automatic power-saving and shut-down. For a
list of all compatible cameras and services, it's best to visit the
Eye-Fi website. There are four versions from which to choose
including the Connect X2 ($49.99), Geo X2 ($69.99), Explore X2
($99.99) and Pro X2 (149.99).
www.eye.fi
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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