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When the Nikon D800 and D800E launched, some users were less than impressed that Eye-Fi cards would not work in Direct Mode. You could still have it join an existing Wi-Fi network, but transmitting ...
Eye-Fi is pre-loaded with all necessary software and comes with its own USB card reader to help with initial setup. You would be right to worry about how much a Wi-Fi card taxes your camera's battery.
Remember the Eye-Fi? That’s the SD card that adds auto-uploading Wi-Fi capabilities to any digital camera. Now the company has teamed with Nikon to add extended Eye-Fi functionality to the first ...
Nikon's brand new prosumer DSLR, the D90, has another surprise in store. It's designed to play nice with Eye-Fi's Wi-Fi memory cards.
Eye-Fi's newest wireless memory card for cameras, the X2 Mobile ($80) claims you can upload photos and video from your camera to the Web via smart devices, using its Direct Mode—no computer needed.
Setup of the Eye-Fi Mobi card for use with an iOS device is fast and easy. First, you install the free Eye-Fi app (universal, also available for Android and Kindle).
Jef Holove, chief executive of Eye-Fi, said that customers have uploaded more than three million photos to photo-sharing sites since the company launched its memory cards in October 2007.
Eye-Fi has issued X2 Utility, a Mac app that enables users of the company’s X2 and older wireless-enabled storage cards to continue using them even after cloud support for those products ends next ...
Lately, though, Eye-Fi has been forced to rethink its product: the company just announced the Mobi, a $50 Class 10 card that sends images directly to your mobile device, bypassing the computer ...