Eye fi microsd
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- #EYE FI MICROSD INSTALL#
- #EYE FI MICROSD UPGRADE#
- #EYE FI MICROSD PRO#
- #EYE FI MICROSD SOFTWARE#
- #EYE FI MICROSD BLUETOOTH#
Or to have unauthorized info written to my device. Frankly it kind of gives me a chill thinking about data able to hive itself off or be harvested to heaven knows where. Of course this only matters to those who care about the security and/or integrity of their data.
#EYE FI MICROSD BLUETOOTH#
A truly secure wifi, bluetooth or other near field technology/solution does not yet exist. Similar to rfid, a vulnerable card is as easily "hacked" as the availability of a cheap wifi "snoop" device had for under 100 bucks. While WPA2 security is effective in a wifi transport CONNECTION, it does nothing to protect, encrypt or secure data stored the card's memory block from unauthorized read/write access. Just FYI for the security conscious consumer: as long as the eye-fi card is energized, specifically the wifi transceiver circuitry block, the memory array block is susceptible to both wireless read and write operations by say an offending device situated within the effective range (that vare as a function of the host power supply (ie camera battery). Be aware though and read the reviews to make your own decision.
#EYE FI MICROSD PRO#
Some pro folks on the Amazon Reviews have said they've had trouble shooting really really fast or that they've had problems with the speed of upload, but I just haven't. I'm not a pro photographer, by any means, but this card works great in my Nikon D40 and my new FujiFilm point and shoot. The wife is thrilled and the WAF (Wife Acceptance Factor) remains high. I seriously don't have a bad thing to say about this card.
#EYE FI MICROSD UPGRADE#
The final cool feature is the Eye-Fi Geo (or you can upgrade your existing card) will automatically geo-tag your photos (if you like) by looking at a database of known Wi-Fi access points around you. Still, not a reason to eat at McDonald's, but a reason to get a soda through the drive through. It'll also do "relayed" uploads, so you can upload to an intermediate website of theirs for temporary storage, and when your computer is on later, it'll download the photos.Īnother nice feature is that it'll automatically upload if it sees a known public hotspot like a hotel or McDonald's, or WayPort. It's a dream.īut what, seriously, that's not all. Now, whenever you take photos, your camera will automatically upload them to your computer when it's near your Wi-Fi. I chose \\server\photos\2010 and it'll automatically make a new folder for each day, although you can change the format of the folder name.īoom, that's it. You tell the manager where to save photos.Again, Kudos to them for supporting WPA2 and instantly seeing my network.You sign into their Eye-Fi Manager Website and tell the card what network to automatically connect to.It uses 8megs on my machine, and I've already forgotten about it.
#EYE FI MICROSD INSTALL#
#EYE FI MICROSD SOFTWARE#
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What is intuitive, however, is just bringing the camera home and putting it back on the shelf. But, it doesn't fit into her life's workflow. Seriously, just put the card in and it'll automatically upload the photos. I've tried putting software like Live Photo Gallery on her machine and adding an SD Card slot. She'll fill 16 gigs of photos and then come find me, "can you put these on the server." But she HATES to upload them to the computer or server. My wife LOVES to take pictures of the boys. I've added a short 2 minute view demonstration to the right here. Like a teacup with your name on it if yours keeps getting pinched at work, or a key-shaped USB key to fit better with a bunch of unruly keys. I basically look at a person's life-workflow and I look for ways to make some tiny thing slightly easier.