

There seems to be an issue when you use the camera without it. I did not say it was an issue using DSLR Controller with the camera. Unless Canon did not test with this configuration. But my EyeFi issue does not quite fit the symptoms as this boot issue only occurs with the battery grip installed. Regarding my EyeFi issue, I did read that some earlier refurbished cameras had this issue and Canon was repairing them gratis.something about a motherboard hardware issue. 802.11ac network is generally faster than local I have not had any issues using DSLR Controller on the 5D's I have or my 1Ds mk3.and as the 1Ds mk3 uses a different locked down OS than the others, I wonder what might be happening. with is MUCH faster (the bottleneck becomes how fast data can be saved to a storage device. The CamRanger 2 pre-release info says it will support 802.11ac network. (Eye-Fi never had any of these features).
EYE FI VS FLASHAIR SOFTWARE
the remote software for CamRanger (works on phones/tablets or computers including mac & pc) will let you control focus, set up capture sequences, etc. There is also a lot of other capabilities. It also supported wired networking (it has an ethernet port) so if you want even faster speeds. The Eye-Fi seems to use a low-power radio that takes a long time to transfer an image). But even that is faster (the radio just seems to be much faster in general.

and you tap the thumbnail to get it to pull across the full-size version of the file.
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When you take a shot, you (very quickly) get a thumbnail of each shot. the WiFi is NOTICEABLY faster than the Eye-Fi. I ultimatley dumped it and got a CamRanger (but if you're not in a hurry. It takes a crazy amount of time to transfer a single RAW image. Shooting small JPEGs meant a delay of many seconds before the image shows up on the client. having used them, I now COMPLETELY understand why they went out of business. I've tried different versions of the Eye-Fi and. You're probably better off just buying the Canon Wi-Fi adapter because it can do everything, and do it well. If it does, it is most likely the Eye-Fi brand, and support for it does not come from Canon. Research whether or not the 5D3 can even support a Wi-Fi card. Research what any Wi-Fi card can and cannot do carefully.
EYE FI VS FLASHAIR SERIES
If you plan to shoot a series of pictures, and then upload them to a laptop wirelessly, those cards may not be up to the task. If you want to shoot a photo, and immediately share it to a social media page in JPEG format, then you find a use for one. How useful those cards are really depends upon what you want to do. They may not be as flexible as you might hope, or expect. If have neither tested or used those cards, but most have one thing in common. Who has tested and what's wprking please? Toshiba also anounced the new much faster/higher capacity FlashAir W-04 several month ago. While I saw some press release reference on the Eye-Fi web-site in relationsToshiba's FlashAir W-02 and W-03 - can't find any relationship if FlashAir is going to work on my camera. Transcend Wifi SD card seemed to be even more challenging and I think they stop producting it too.Īs it sounded Toshiba's FlashAir did not have the "fine tuning" capabilties of the Pro-X2. SanDisk had also some sort of licencing with Eye-Fi but SanDisk got bought by Toshiba several years ago (or something in that line).
EYE FI VS FLASHAIR PRO
Now, there semed to be a mobi PRO but can't find anything 5D MKIII related and as it seemed Eye-Fi entered some sort of technology exchange with Toshiba last year - which is great. Eye-Fi was leading the pack and the Pro-X2 was the product of joice. However this is EOLand the mobi version did not work. Now, looking on-line - plenty of (old) stuff. I would like to integrate Wi-Fi into my Canon 5D MkIII.
