Nikon Releases WiFi Digital Camera 144
LegendOfLink writes "Nikon just revealed the world's first WiFi-enabled camera! It runs 802.11b/g and allows users to send files over a network. From the blurb: "Wireless shooting automatically transfers each picture to a selected computer as soon as it is shot. Pictures can then be viewed with Nikon's powerful yet fun-to-use and easy PictureProject software. And wireless printing delivers the convenience of cable-free direct printing to PictBridge-compatible printers. All these functions are easy to implement, too. Just set them up with the Wizard utility to enjoy easy wireless capabilities that add outstanding flexibility to the digital photography experience. "
Straight from the Camera to 0dayporn.com! (Score:3, Funny)
Um... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Um... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Um... (Score:2)
The only difference would be now you don't need a standalone cable or card reader to transfer the photos. Seems like a pretty good, obvious idea to me.
Re:Um... (Score:2)
Yet another bad article by Zonk (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Um... (Score:1)
The summary was mostly a short introduction of the plucked-out marketing talk from the article - which itself probably was a WSOGMM of the original press release... Has anyone else ever heard of http://physorg.com/ [physorg.com] before? Anyone?
Re:Um... (Score:2)
Has anyone else ever heard of http://physorg.com/ [physorg.com] before? Anyone?
phys-what [slashdot.org]?Re:Um... (Score:3, Insightful)
Pictures can then be viewed with Nikon's powerful yet fun-to-use and easy PictureProject software
can? or must? I'm sure Nikon thinks their software is "powerful" and "fun-to-use" but I've never ever liked the software included with any peripheral I've ever bought - scanners, cameras, printers, etc.
World's First? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-p
Re:World's First? (Score:1)
Kodak not first... Nikon D2h and WT-1 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Nikon not 1st either; Ricoh beat them by 3 year (Score:2)
Mod parent up. Here's an article about the Ricoh RDC-i700, dated 3/18/2002:
http://www.macworld.com/news/2002/03/18/ricoh/ind e x.php [macworld.com]
And a review from CNet, dated 6/28/2001:
http://reviews.cnet.com/Ricoh_RDC_i7 [cnet.com]
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
Unfortunately (and unsurprisingly), RSS doesn't honor your "homepage" preferences. Maybe when the slashcode developers get some time away from their day jobs they can add in that feature!
Back on topic: If the "editors" (they don't edit, why do they call themselves that?) had done a couple seconds of research this st
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
Right on. I'm not completely against "slashvertising" but c'mon, give us the meat. I might not m
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
The code can be found here [slashcode.com]. Go scratch your itch.
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
The benefit of publishing the RSS feed, for large sites, is that it's largely static, undifferentiated, and doesn't chew up massive CPU when it gets hammered like mad by autorefreshing clients. That would go out the window if they made it login-able (pardon the mangled english).
I'm not saying it wouldn't be nice - I've been surprised by items in the RSS feed too - but I never expected the RSS to be personalized like my logi
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
Cheers.
Re:World's First? (Score:2)
Hey, wait a minute, maybe that's the whole point to bringing Zonk on, it's a subscription booster!
LOL (nt) (Score:2)
Re:World's First? (Score:3, Informative)
Battery life? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Battery life? (Score:3, Insightful)
802.11g has speed of 20 - 54 Mbits/second, or around 2.5 - 7 Mbytes/second.
Since a compressed JPEG image is around 400Kbytes, you could easy take and send a picture within a second. Even an uncompressed image might only take a second. Compare that speed to a flashcard which takes several seconds to save a compressed JPEG image.
Re:Battery life? (Score:2)
Re:Battery life? (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't forget that you still need to locate a wireless access point, associate with that wireless accespoint, and then encapulsate the data for transmission over a network. Oh, and provide some 20-30mW of transmission power to achieve the normal range seen by
Forget the download hacks... (Score:5, Funny)
Honest honey! I don't know where ~those~ pictures came from!!! Honey?? Let me back in the house....
Re:Forget the download hacks... (Score:5, Funny)
Not quite the first ever.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Some nokia phones can work as a webcam and connect over bluetooth, which is wifi-esque -- not too mention wifi-enabled IP web/securitycameras, like the ones from axis. Doesn't really fit the bill, but a wifi/ip-enabled security camera actually makes more sense than a wified digital camera. To me, at least.
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Wifi is a huge thing in pro level cameras because it means you can shoot effectively infinitely without having to stop to change out cards (including the down time of waiting to write to them before you can safely power off). Accepting being tethered by a power cable, your shoot can last as long as you want without needing to stop. When you're paying for model, make up artist and assistant time, that's huge.
The downside being that th
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Perhaps it could upload to the hard drive of the iPod (or iPod-like device) that the consumer is carrying in his pocket. (of course, something like Bluetooth might be a better way to do that, and better still might be just putting the hard drive into the camera)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
True enough, but this camera is just a consumer level POS (point ond shoot) camera. You know, where
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
I wonder about the utility even in those situations. A WiFi-enabled laptop would seem more advantageous given that you could fill up a card, pop the card into the laptop, start the picture dump and put a fresh card in. If desired, and a conn
Re:Not quite the first ever.. (Score:2)
These days, digital commercial and fashion
Marketing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Marketing (Score:1)
Great feature, potential battery life issues? (Score:2)
Useful for demonstration pictures, etc. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Useful for demonstration pictures, etc. (Score:1)
Or corperate espionage. I work in a secure building, Cameras are not allowed. However, with a small camera and wifi, what's to stop someone from connecting to an AP in their car? Of course, the flip-side, this isn't new. My PDA has both wifi and a camera...
Re:Useful for demonstration pictures, etc. (Score:2)
uhm. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:uhm. (Score:2)
Almost correct (Score:1)
What may be new is actually shooting from a distant location using wlan.
Re:Almost correct (Score:2, Informative)
Whoopti Do. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Whoopti Do. (Score:1)
Re:Whoopti Do. (Score:1)
Who cares! REAL issues instead? (Score:2, Interesting)
If you want to pick issues about Nikon's stuff, there's lots of REAL ones to pick...
I, for one, didn't buy a Nikon DSLR body to replace my old Nikon SLRs. I went with a Fuji DSLR instead. The flash system is just a mess. Not that it doesn't work. But why change the flash gear like 3 times in a row? From *real* TTL to eTTL/iTTL oddball stuff. So you had to ditch
But the real question is (Score:3, Funny)
Re:But the real question is (Score:1, Funny)
No, I think the real question is... (Score:1)
Re:No, I think the real question is... (Score:2)
It plays Doom? (Score:2, Funny)
It: plays: Doom: (Score:3, Funny)
Not the first. (Score:1)
Re:Not the first. (Ricoh) (Score:3, Informative)
And it was definitely a consumer camera. It had a tiny lens and was designed as a flattish bar similar to old 110-film Instamatics.
Allow me to translate (Score:5, Insightful)
This...
...actually means:
I can see it now...
Honestly, I could write a book.
Don't misunderestimate Nikon Picture Project (Score:2)
Re:Don't misunderestimate Nikon Picture Project (Score:2)
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:1)
The ptp/ip protocol:
https://www.fotonation.com/ [fotonation.com]
Linux support for digital cameras and PTP/IP in particular:
http://www.gphoto.org/ [gphoto.org]
Raw image processing, including encrypted Nikon D2X images:
http://www.cybercom.net/~dcoffin/dcraw/ [cybercom.net]
http://www.robgalbraith.com/bins/content_page.asp? cid=7-6459-7213 [robgalbraith.com]
http://www.photoreview.com.au/Articlexasp/90c83053 -0a7f-45cc-ba68-9560e9f3c061/Default.htm [photoreview.com.au]
http: [mobilemag.com]
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:1)
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:2)
Are you still refering to Linux there, or Windows?
If you mean Windows, then the software for my Dad's HP camera (or is it for his scanner?) installs an icon on the desktop that [a] is 100% useless - it's some Share-To-Web virtual folder crap he'll never use, and [b] I can't delete, even as Administrator.
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:2)
Shift-Delete just means delete it instead of moving it to the trash.
As for the command line - it's an Explorer Shell namespace icon, so good luck finding it from the command line :-)
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:1)
(from the we've just alienated half the audience dept.)
Thanks for wasting 5 minutes of my life I can't get back. (Oh, wait, this is Slashdot. Nevermind.)
--
Dave
http://www.davidearls.info/ [davidearls.info]
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:1, Offtopic)
Want to put some money on that?
Re:Allow me to translate (Score:1)
oh man (Score:3, Funny)
hotspot... where? (Score:2, Interesting)
Huh? (Score:4, Informative)
Geez... (Score:1)
Am I the only person that is sick and tired of what Addot has become? That "editor" Zonk has been relentlessly plugging for company after corp, and after this latest non-story in the annals of $lashdot, I'm starting to wish there were more folks on Technocrat.
Wonderful Idea... (Score:3, Insightful)
Then I had another thought: with the advent of protable digtal cams being used to feed a modern culture of voyeurs, it's just a matter of time before there are voyeurs with protable wi-fi cam sniffers, lingering nearby to leech onto an unsuspecting data transfer. I read a few months ago about how some guys had built a bluetooth sniper rifle; unnoticed, they would stand atop tall downtown buildings and digitally eavesdrop on nearby blackberries and other pdas.
It seems the more freedom we embrace, the more we surrender.
Not even close. The Nikon D2X came out in Feb (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.nikonusa.com/template.php?cat=1&grp=2&p roductNr=25215 [nikonusa.com]
Ever hear of this thing called Google?
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=nikon+wifi&bt nG=Google+Search [google.com]
dood (Score:1)
sheesh!
I have to akxs, cause maybe I am missing something, but how is a journalist in the field, going to be able to upload to a remote server, when you have to first instal client software on whatever machine you are downloading to?
Also what initiates the downloads?
The camera or the desktop?
If its the camera I cannot wait to see the tiny interface for connecting.
first a list of access points, then
shoot remotely (Score:1, Interesting)
Does anyone know if it supports this feature?
Their previous protocol WT-2 did...
"I agree. The Remote Camera Control function offers PC control over various settings and operations, including focus and exposure adjustment, through USB cable connection of a PC installed with "Nikon Capture 4 (version 4.2)" and camera. The WT-2, however, lets you use this function without the USB cable connection, makin
New York Times Review (Score:1)
Summary: It would be better if it could connect to the Internet.
pretty useless. (Score:3, Insightful)
it sits there as a wifi share either set it to join any network it finds when turned on or make it default to adhoc mode.
that would rock. " Hey I need those files, just a second, I'll download them from my backpack."
there are gobs of really cool stuff that could be done with wifi or bluetooth, yet we get useless crap like wifi enabled digital cameras.
Re:pretty useless. (Score:2, Informative)
Bah, here's what I want to see... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Bah, here's what I want to see... (Score:1)
What I really want to see is a GPS-enabled camera that records not only time and date in the metadata, but also latitude and longitude.
That's a fantastic idea! Since Google Earth came out I've been visiting a few places I've backpacked in the past to match photos to a location. Too may trails ... not enough coordinates!
Re:Bah, here's what I want to see... (Score:2)
That's far too useful for the corporate marketing suits to think of...but it needs one other thing: a compass. Being able to work out from the GPS coords that I was on top of Mt Smoky is fine, but which way was I looking?
no-wires transfer, no-upload sharing (Score:1)
anyone know whether this camera shoots MPEG-1 video?
'68 Democrat Convention reports in people's hands (Score:4, Insightful)
He did this by ordering his police to smash the newsies' cameras.
This had always worked before.
He also has his pet union bosses block the stringing of much of the TV cabling into the convention center, hotels, and surrounds that would have carried the pictures. That was expected to work, too.
But the newsies were trying out a new technology: The "minicam". This was enormous. A "miniatureized" TV camera about as big as your torso, shoulder mounted. Hooked to a backpack full of electronics and batteries, with a big antenna sticking out. About all a strong man could carry. But just barely enough to get the signal to the next stage: A semitruck full of electronics, located within a block, terminating in a microwave dish to pipe the signal to a nearby studio.
And this was Chicago. Where all three major networks had a studio there, along with the major facilities for their cross-country video landline.
What was brand new about it the "mini"cam: It was real-time. By the time the billyclub smashed the lens the image of the billyclub had come zooming at the faces of a country full of TV watchers.
Oops!
For the next three days the crowd chants "The Whole World Is Watching" as the process repeats. The country is treated to video of the National Guard and the 101st Airborne shoving crowds around with assault rifles, jeeps mounting machine guns and others mounting barbed-wire barriers, and enough teargas to fog the center of a city, plus enough repeats of police people bashing that instant replay is redundant.
And a once-well-liked Democratic party functionary's nomination is totally discredited. And the Republican wins the race.
Fast forward to near the end of the century. Video cameras that record on tape are now a consumer item. And a citizen tapes the interaction between the LA Police and Rodney King. Regardless of whether the cops were acting rightly or out of control, the scene makes for riots once it hits the news - and again when the cops are acquitted.
So is the reaction of the California governments to clean up the LA cops? Of course not! (Their gang task forces are left to run wild until their pattern of evidence-faking and perjury leads to legal challenges of their previous cases and the release nearly everybody they ever busted.) Instead they pass a law to BAN recording government functionaries (such as police) performing their functions. And the police use this to sieze any videotape made of their actions.
Videocams are in the same position that film cameras were BEFORE the Democratic Convention of '68.
Until now.
Cellphone cameras were a start. But this looks like a system that will put publication-quality radio-linked realtime news photography in the hands of the general population.
Granted it's just stills so far. But it looks to me like John Q Public just got his hands on the class of technological tool that only the network newsies have had for the last 35 years.
Just in time for the next step in the replacement of the the news establishment with the Internet-based open media. B-)
GPS (Score:2)
At least with wifi, cameras can now send pics directly to computers or PDAs. Now if their protocols are open (like PictBridge), one can write opensource software that would stamp the camera's location onto EXIF.
Nikon has supported this for years (Score:2)
Nope, not the first. (Score:2)
But, Nikon WiFi D2X is the first ... (Score:2)
Part II: Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote [seanalexander.com]
questions... (Score:3, Interesting)
Can you send commands to the camera through WiFi? (No hint that it is, so probably NO).
Can the camera be run off a power supply? (Probably YES)
If you could do all those things, the camera would make a great web cam and Nikon could sell huge numbers of it. But probably it won't work again.
It is truly frustrating that there is so much great camera hardware out there and camera manufacturers screw up on the software, the protocols, and openness. I have yet to see even a working, fairly complete PTP implementation over USB.
Disney and other theme parks will love this (Score:2)
Re:Oh a Nifty Gadget of Some Kind (Score:1)
Re:Oh a Nifty Gadget of Some Kind (Score:1, Offtopic)
Maybe I'm sounding hypocritical, but put your money where your mouth is and go help the people.
Re:Oh a Nifty Gadget of Some Kind (Score:1)
tell me that.
Re:DOes it workw with Macintosh? (Score:2)
Mac OS X allows you to not only share the contents of a digital camera over ZeroConf (Bonjour), it allows a remote Macintosh to preview the camera viewscreen image and even snap the picture, wired or wirelessly.