The Eye-Fi Explore X2 product would be useful for anyone who wants to capture as many pictures as they want, dash into a wireless area, upload them and have a new memory card to use with all your pictures safe and sound! It is n’t often that a new product gets me excited but having been a victim of the all to common “Well I’m out of memory space!” problem.
A Wi-Fi router compatible with 802.11 b/g/n on the 2.4GHz band.The Eye-Fi Explore X2 card works in hundreds of cameras. Here is what you need to take advantage of this great new SD card: The Eye-Fi Explore X2 is easy to set up it just takes a few minutes and you are good to go. Get email, Facebook, text message* or Twitter alerts when your photos are uploading online. You can select which photos and videos are uploaded. See the complete list you can choose from, which includes Flickr, Facebook, Picasa, MobileMe, and YouTube. Wirelessly send your JPEG photos and videos to a popular website. It offers effortless sharing to your favorite social media sites. The Eye-Fi Explore X2 card can wirelessly upload photos and videos to folders of your choice on your computer, or even directly into iPhoto for Macs! It is compatible with hundreds of devices. It brings your trip viewing to a whole new level. View, search and share your latest trips on a map. It is lifetime and automatic! Geo-tagging service helps you organize and share your photos. Selected EOS models have menu items for enhanced Eye-Fi card use. What this does is logs the time and place you took a picture or video.
Upload on-the-go through one of tens of thousands of AT&T Wi-Fi HotSpots, including your favorite coffee shop, hotels, restaurants and more. Photos and videos can automatically land in date-based folders, so memories are organized effortlessly by date. The Eye-Fi Explore X2 card keeps your content organized. Never worry about running out of space again. It can be purchased from a slew of online retailers for 99.99. This means it is the only card that can free-up space for you after pictures are safely delivered. The Eye-Fi card is currently compatible with 18 major photo-sharing and social-networking websites and comes in a 2GB package. Apart from the various sizes, this card has a data transfer speed of up to 1.5Mbps, allowing you to transfer files from SD card to your device seamlessly. Uploading your content will give you an unlimited amount of memory and usage out of the card. The ez Share Wi-Fi SD enabled SD card comes in the capacities ranging from 4GB to 32GB. The 8 GB Card can store up to 4,000 photos or 3h of video with superfast class 6 read & write speeds. It is wireless, you can upload photos & videos from your camera through your Wi-Fi network with unprecedented wireless performance thanks to built-in 802.11n technology. Product Overview The SanDisk Eye-Fi wireless memory card makes transferring photos and videos from your camera effortless.
The Wireless SD card also has an Automatic geo-tagging feature to effortlessly map your adventures. There are WiFi hotspots everywhere now the ability to upload from including your favorite coffee shop, hotels, gyms and more. You can now have photos & videos upload from your camera to your computer or favorite media sharing site with speed and ease! Explore has developed a wireless SD card that allows uploading while in a WiFi zone. Has anyone tried anything like this? By the way, the DSLR Remote app supports Lightroom integration as well, so we have a closed loop system for remote controlled photography if this all works.Sometimes a product comes along that is simple in its brilliance. So I was wondering if this WiFi memory card could be used to connect the DSLR to the laptop via an ad hoc WiFi netowrk, and using the same ad hoc network have the iPhone DSLR Remote app control the server s/w on the laptop? In theory it is possible but the devil is in the details. But In some locations for remote triggering in sports photography such as the backboard in basketball, or the goalie net in hockey, it is not practical to have a laptop tethered within several feet of the DSLR. The only issue is that it does not directly control the DSLR, but does do via a computer (usually a laptop) than is tethered to the DSLR with a USB cable. Taking this wireless thing one step further … I recently picked up the iPhone app called DSLR Remote, where the iPhone can control and trigger a DSLR via a WiFi connection.