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As such, I've found utopia in the Eye-Fi. Pictures might look great on the little display LCD on the camera, but they look completely different on a computer display. Prior to the Eye-Fi, I would constantly take the SD card out and stick it in a reader to see if the last shot I took was crisp enough to publish. Ninety percent of what I use my camera for is indoor product shots for reviews. While the Eye-Fi has noticeable drawbacks, I still love it and I'll tell you why. If you have an Eye-Fi card, I would be interested in hearing how fast images transfer for you. As this was from wireless access point 2 floors below me, I can imagine a throughput speed of up to 250KB/s being attainable. Taking the average size of a 10MP image from a Nikon D80 set to JPEG normal, which is about 2MB, and dividing that by the ~15 seconds it takes to transfer each image I can calculate that the approximate transfer rate is 135KB/s. In that case, you will likely want to take it out and use a card reader. That is, it isn't terribly fast if you're trying to dump 2GB of photos onto your computer. Transferring an image from the Eye-Fi card to my computer.Īfter transferring several photos on my wireless network, it became clear that the Eye-Fi card is great for transferring a few shots you just took to your computer. This account manages all of your Eye-Fi settings from whether to upload to your computer and any web services. Running the Eye-Fi Manager fires up the Eye.fi website where you create an account.
#Nikon eye fi install
From there, you find the appropriate installer for your OS then install and run it. The first step is plugging the Eye-Fi with its included SD card reader into your computer.
#Nikon eye fi software
Setting up the Eye-Fi is fairly simple but involves installing local software on your Mac/PC (no Linux support) which receives settings from an Eye.fi account you must create. It appears as though Eye-Fi is aiming to make repetitive card readings and fiddling with a USB cable things of the past. Once that is all done, the point of the Eye-Fi is to upload your photos while your camera is on and connected your wireless network to one of the many supported photo sharing services and/or your computer.
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The Eye-Fi is like any other SD card, except that there is some setup to do first. If you factor in that the SD card will be somewhat buried inside a camera during use and the use of a strictly internal antenna, you can see why I was initially skeptical of wireless performance. Surprisingly everything is inside the SD card, including the Wi-Fi antenna.
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Amazingly, they were able to pack in 802.11 circuitry along with 2GB of flash memory in the familiar 24mm - 32mm SD form factor. I am of course referring to Eye-Fi's long awaited wireless SD card. When that SD card has integrated Wi-Fi abilities to immediately upload your photos, then you start to understand why all the buzz is justified. It's not often that an SD memory card comes out and creates a ton of fanfare.