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Eye fi wireless sd card
Eye fi wireless sd card













eye fi wireless sd card
  1. #Eye fi wireless sd card drivers#
  2. #Eye fi wireless sd card full size#
  3. #Eye fi wireless sd card upgrade#
  4. #Eye fi wireless sd card full#
  5. #Eye fi wireless sd card android#

The Eye-Fi now supports direct mode, which allows you to download your photos directly to your Android or iOS device, something that people were asking for in the previous review. You can see above that the Eye-Fi sets up its own little SSID and WPA2 secured network. Julie discussed the iPhone app in her review but this only covered getting photos from her iPhone’s camera to her Eye-Fi account, and this archival function still exists.

#Eye fi wireless sd card full#

I’ve been downloading my pictures to my local machine in full resolution and then in a reduced resolution to Photobucket for sharing on web sites. The nice thing is you can also reduce the resolution of your photos to put into your online service. You can upload to an online service alone, to a local machine alone, or to both. I’m not sure why so many are repeated when you click the selection page, but here’s the screen you get. Eye-Fi now covers 25 online services that you can automatically upload your pictures to.

eye fi wireless sd card

Something to keep in mind if you intend to use it in a corporate environment. First “glitch”, the Eye-Fi does not support an EAP WiFi network. So in the end, all I bought was the basic 4GB model. I received my Eye-Fi card at work, and in a frantic new-toy frenzy went to set it up. Now the best photo opportunities here are WAY outside the metro area 🙂 You can check out your own area on their coverage page, but something to keep in mind is that this method is never going to be anywhere near as accurate for geotagging as using a GPS. You can see in the map above how limited the coverage in my state is. Skyhook’s extensive coverage area includes most major metro areas in North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. “Īs such, the geotagging feature wasn’t that useful to me as I spent a lot of time NOT in major metro areas.

#Eye fi wireless sd card drivers#

To develop this database, Skyhook has deployed drivers to survey every single street, highway, and alley in tens of thousands of cities and towns worldwide, scanning for Wi-Fi access points and cell towers plotting their precise geographic locations. “To pinpoint location, Skyhook uses a massive reference network comprised of the known locations of over 700 million Wi-Fi access points and cellular towers. 🙂 The geotagging feature uses Skyhook’s wireless service.

#Eye fi wireless sd card full size#

The question was how did they fit a full size GPS into such a small card? The answer, they didn’t. My solution to get around this IF I need to is to create a WiFi hotspot with my Android phone, though data charges and the size of photo files these days is something to keep in mind if you’re going to do this.Īfter file transfers, the function that interested me the most in regards to the Eye-Fi was the geotagging feature. If not included, the card can be upgraded.” Cards with this feature have 1 year of HotSpot Access included, renewable yearly thereafter. “Want to upload away from home? HotSpot Access enables you to upload from open networks and over thousands Hotspots including Starbucks, Barnes & Noble, McDonalds, hotels, restaurants and airports. The hotspot functionality was useless to me as it mostly covered the US and there wasn’t much use having it in Australia.

eye fi wireless sd card

#Eye fi wireless sd card upgrade#

If you purchase a card that doesn’t support a function, you can upgrade it to add it however, this will incur a yearly renewal fee. The nice thing is that even though Julie has had her Eye-Fi for a while, she should be able to upgrade the firmware to get the added functionality.Įye-Fi has 3 current models at the time of writing, each with slightly different functionality, with the main differences being memory size, hotspot access, and geotagging. Nice to see a company that stands behind development of its product.

eye fi wireless sd card

Since Julie’s review, there’s been 8 firmware upgrades, so hopefully there’s been some changes to functionality and bug fixes in the updates. I’ll also try and answer some of the comments from the old review that were never answered. There’s been a few changes since then so having just obtained a Connect X2 SD card with wireless photo and video uploads from Eye-Fi (with assistance from Julie), I thought I’d cover some of the features not covered in Julie’s older review either because they weren’t available or because it was a function she didn’t use. Julie last did a review of the Eye-Fi photo-transfer SD cards in May 2010. If you buy something through the links on this page, we may earn a commission at no cost to you.















Eye fi wireless sd card