A**7
Works when camera setting on Nikon D90 is accurately configured!
This wifi card really works! I own a nikon D90 firmware ver: A 1.00 B 1.01 L 2.015. I use an iPad mini 2 with iOS 10.1.1. I have already tried the new eye-fi mobi and the flashair 3 but didn't really work out well since the manufacturers did not have any clue on how to provide a technical solution as to why many customers complain wifi signals keep dropping connections. I knew for the fact that the issue was not really the wifi cards but it was my nikon D90s settings. But I had no clue how to set it properly! My issue was that the wifi signal was intermittent on all three cards I have tried so far. My iPad mini (even iPhone 5s and Macbook Pro) could barely hold the wifi signal from the wifi cards (eye-fi, flashair 3, and ez share) for a few seconds before it will drop over and over again. I returned the eye-fi mobi and flashair 3. I bought the ez share later to try it out and met the same wifi issues. Then I went to the ez Share website to check on the FAQs (which is actually very useful unlike Eye-Fis and the FlashAir's FAQ which didn't give anything much except technical limitations of their wifi cards). I found out why the wifi signal drops and wouldn't hold at all. I had to set three things to allow the wifi card inside my nikon D90 to give out the wifi-signal continuously. Remember, when the wifi is on continuously the camera battery will take a hit but not by much in my use. I carry 3 batts for my nikon D90.DISCLAIMER: This worked for me but may not for you. It is a technical solution that I tried as suggested and the result was the wifi signal held continuously from the nikon D90 camera. If you have a different camera there may be additional functions that need to be changed. Please refer to your camera's manual for guidance. The bottom line is to turn off any function which will make the camera sleep or conserve battery.1) Check date setting of the nikon D90. Date must be accurate.2) Turn 'AUTO METER-OFF DELAY' to 30m (Custom Setting Menu > c Timers/AE lock > c2 Auto meter-off delay > 30m3) Turn GPS Auto meter off to DISABLE (SETUP MENU > GPS > Auto meter off > DISABLE)After this configuration, I connected to my nikon D90s ez Share wifi card from my iPad min 2 and took pictures. I let my nikon D90 stand by for 45 minutes and went back to take pictures again and the wifi signal didn't even drop. My iPad mini 2 was still connected to the wifi card despite so many wireless signals in the environment. The nikon D90 didn't go to 'sleep mode'. It stayed on continuously. I hope this helps.Update!Product works but wifi signal drops when camera is about 2 meters away. Not really good for actual usage.
L**D
Good Product, Poor Instructions
Very happy with this product. I use it with my Canon Rebel T3 and it works perfectly. I use it primarily to sync photos from my camera to my iPhone. My only suggestion to the company would be to have better directions. The instructions are simple but lacking. It was a little confusing figuring out how to use the SD card at first but after looking at advice from different reviewers I was able to figure it out.Tips:-Follow their basic instructions.-Download the app ex Share Wi-Fi SD. (The provided instructions don't mention this.)-Watch some of the video reviews for some help.-If you are having a hard time getting the app to pull up photos from your camera try uploading some photos onto your computer by inserting the SD card into your computer and pulling up the photos in the traditional manner. After I did this I was able to use the SD card just fine and as expected. I don't know what that does exactly but it seemed to make the difference for me. I saw another reviewer mention it and I'm glad I tried it. I only had to do that one time for the SD card to work appropriately with my phone.
R**N
Works very well.
Works great. Both the phone app and browser access work fine. I ended up buying a cheapo USB wifi adapter for my desktop to use with the card, it was easier than having to reset my wifi connections on my laptop or phone. My initial idea was to use an old router as a bridge from my home network to the camera, but I could never get it to connect to the camera. I could ping it, but not access the content. Hence the USB dongle, which works fine. If anyone gets one to bridge to a local LAN I'd love to know how you did it.Bottom line is works well, and doesn't seem to affect the battery life in my DSLR significantly. Transfer speed is acceptable, about the same a downloading from a web site. For 25 clams it's a nice solution.I'd recommend it.
R**T
Five Stars
Easy to use good product
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 day ago