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Página inicial » Artigos » Filmagem em tempo real com cartão SDHC Toshiba FlashAir WiFi
A configuração funciona muito bem e as imagens RAW são transferidas e visíveis no Capture
One em alguns segundos a partir do momento em que são gravadas. O problema é que sou
um klutz e tenho o hábito de tropeçar no cabo durante as sessões. Como resultado, estou
no meu terceiro cabo depois de danificar a extremidade pequena dos dois primeiros.
Também estou começando a ter problemas periódicos de conexão e questiono se posso ter
danificado a porta USB da câmera (embora prefira culpar a Apple pelos problemas, pois a
reinicialização do iMac geralmente resolve o problema). Até que a porta falhe
completamente, prefiro não precisar enviar minha câmera principal à Canon para reparos, o
que significa que tive que começar a pensar em alternativas aos meus métodos atuais. As
opções que eu criei incluíam:
Dessas opções, um cartão SD WiFi parecia pelo menos valer a pena examinar. Comecei
examinando o Eye-Fi - um cartão SD WiFi que existe há cerca de
uma dúzia de anos e provavelmente o nome mais familiar nos
uma dúzia de anos e provavelmente o nome mais familiar nos
cartões SD WiFi. No entanto, não está claro o que está
acontecendo com o Eye-Fi - clicar no botão Comprar agora no site
do Eye-Fi me levou a um link da Amazon com o cartão de memória
SD Toshiba 32 GB FlashAir III sem fio. Ao comparar os dois, peguei
informações suficientes para questionar a direção em que o Eye-Fi
está indo e se o cartão Eye-Fi era uma boa idéia a longo prazo,
então pensei em experimentar o Toshiba FlashAir. . Imaginei por US $ 45, o pior que poderia
acontecer é que acabaria com um cartão SD de 32 GB extra.
Aqui está o que eu preciso ser capaz de: Tirar uma foto com minha câmera e revisar
imediatamente a foto no Capture One no meu computador. Quando a próxima foto é
tirada, ela se torna a próxima a aparecer no visualizador do Capture One. Sem fio.
Eu sabia que não seria fácil; o FlashAir parece ser famoso por sua falta de documentação, e
o que ele possui é praticamente inútil. Levei cerca de meio dia e muita experimentação, mas
eis como eu consegui funcionar.
NOTA: Essas etapas são específicas da minha configuração de fotografia (iMac, executando
o OS X Sierra), mas podem facilitar as coisas para outra pessoa cujo objetivo é o mesmo.
Ainda não testei o FlashAir na estação de trabalho do meu PC. :
Usando essa configuração, os arquivos RAW são gravados no cartão CF e os JPGs grandes
são gravados no cartão SD WiFi. Os JPGs são sincronizados com o computador assim que
são gravados no cartão SD e ficam imediatamente disponíveis para visualização no Capture
One. Quaisquer ajustes feitos nas imagens do Capture One durante a captura estão sendo
feitos nos JPGs copiados do cartão SD - não nas imagens RAW.
Lembrete : Os arquivos RAW gravados no cartão CF ainda precisam ser transferidos para o
dispositivo principal manualmente através de um leitor de cartão.
Por si só, o cartão FlashAir permite copiar arquivos da sua câmera para outro dispositivo,
incluindo um telefone iPhone ou Android (por meio de um aplicativo) ou um Mac ou um PC
com Windows (por meio de um navegador da web). No entanto, o processo não é
automático - a transferência dos arquivos requer uma atualização do aplicativo ou do
q q ç p
navegador. Graças à ferramenta simples criada pelo Anastasiy Safari , o processo se torna
automático e não requer o uso de um navegador. Felizmente, a Toshiba pensa em fornecer
a mesma funcionalidade que uma opção para seu próprio software.
Este artigo foi publicado em Computadores e Software , Equipamento e marcou a câmera , Canon , Capture One
, equipamento , software e fluxo de trabalho .
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David Warren
O t b 31 2017 t 2 03
October 31, 2017 at 2:03 am
Cathy
November 18, 2017 at 7:37 am
I have tried to get this to work in my 5D mark iii and I only get an error when I insert it
into the camera that it is not accessible and to format the card. I actually tried that and
the camera won’t even format it. I have tried to find something about it and I can’t. It is
the w-04 version and the mark iii is listed as compatible. Do you have any advice?
Galen
November 18, 2017 at 3:44 pm
Cathy,
You definitely don’t want to format the card as it contains the software required to
communicate with the computer (see the note near the end of the article). Did you
first run the FlashAir Tool from the computer with the card in the computer SD slot?
The FlashAir Tool must be run first in order for the card to be configured for use with
the camera.
Galen
Zuhair
November 29, 2017 at 12:35 pm
Galen
November 29, 2017 at 12:56 pm
Zuhair,
This is what happens when the process works, as I understand it:
– You press the shutter, the camera records to the FlashAir card.
– The FlashAir card also acts as a WiFi connected device.
– Flash Sync continually polls the card to see if new images have been added.
– If Flash Sync sees new images added, it copies the new images via WiFi from the
FlashAir card to the Mac.
So, I can’t think of any reason why simply pressing the shutter would interfere with
communication between the FlashAir card and the Mac. You’re using an EOS 5D Mk III
and some variety of Mac?
Galen
Zuhair
November 29, 2017 at 1:22 pm
Galen
November 29, 2017 at 1:37 pm
Zuhair,
Strange. Have you tried using the Safari method on your MacBook? I haven’t tried
that method since Flash Sync has worked for me, but it might be worth a try.
Galen
Galen
November 29, 2017 at 1:59 pm
Zuhair,
Also, did you read the FlashAir compatibility notes specific to your camera?
Looking at the notes pertaining to the D610, I see the following:
“*3: From “Menu” of the camera, choose “Custom Settings ” > “Monitor off delay”.
Set all the times to the maximum or no limit. Also, from “Custom Settings”, choose
“Standby timer” and set the time to the maximum.”
and
“*4: To use a FlashAir™ in the Manual startup mode, make the following settings
on the camera: Choose “Playback” > “Playback Folder” > “All”. This will allow the
wireless LAN startup image, the default image file in the FlashAir™, (“DCIM”>
“100__TSB” > “FA000001.JPG”) to display on the camera. For more information, see
the User Manual of the camera.”
Galen
zuhair
November 29, 2017 at 2:22 pm
Thanks Glen,
It is done actually.
Flashair works and no issues, it is the flash sync that is not.
I think he will need to update his software for high sierra. it could be some
compatibility with that. i will keep searching and if any updates i will post here.
Zuhair
December 1, 2017 at 4:29 pm
Galen,
Am very happy to report that It is working just fine with high sierra, i reinstalled it and
flo
December 16, 2017 at 9:47 pm
Hi,
This is brilliant, thanks for the tutorial. Is there a way to have a style automatically
applied to the picture like when doing traditional cable tethering?
Thanks
Flo
Galen
December 18, 2017 at 8:56 am
Flo,
I haven’t tested it, but I don’t see why it wouldn’t work the same way. According to the
Capture One Blog:
“When shooting tethered, any Style can be applied from Next Capture
Adjustments within the Capture tool tab. This will instantly apply the Style to
any captured image shot into Capture One.”
The difference might be whether Capture One interprets images from the FlashAir
card as imports or as captures (or as neither).
Galen
Roza
March 22, 2018 at 10:17 am
Galen, thank you so much for this article. Can you use this card with Lightroom instead
of Capture one?
Galen
March 22, 2018 at 10:54 am
Galen
yael
May 2, 2018 at 6:19 am
Hi Galen,
tnx
yael
Galen
May 2, 2018 at 7:30 am
Yael,
Correct. I use the CF card for RAW and the FlashAir card for jpg. The jpgs are sent to
Capture One for immediate viewing and I transfer the images from the CF card post-
shoot using a card reader. This is a speed issue – saving the images as RAW on the
FlashAir card makes for unacceptably slow transfers to the computer and jpgs give
FlashAir card makes for unacceptably slow transfers to the computer and jpgs give
me enough information to see what I need during the shoot
Galen
ge0kas
Galen
January 18, 2019 at 10:23 am
It’s absolutely possible to transfer RAW files – I chose not to because of the speed
issue. I found it impractical to wait for 30 seconds or more between shots during
something like a portrait session, in which I want immediate input.
Kevin House
June 23, 2018 at 4:09 am
I’ve had a Transcend card for years but never managed to get it to work with Lightroom.
I finally gave up and bought a flashair a couple of weeks ago. It took a bit of
perseverance, but I eventually managed to get it to work with my NEX-7 and Lightrooom
using Frank Eberle’s add-in. I’ve found it’s a bit temperamental, sometimes not loading
for a minute or more and then pulling all shots in. But I suspect that’s because the
camera body is mostly metal and impedes the signal, and the JPG previews are quite
large so not ideal for rapid transfer. But when it’s working well I can get an image on
screen in a few seconds and it;s great to have that ability.
Well worth trying.
Galen
June 23, 2018 at 7:26 am
Thanks for the input, Kevin.
John
October 20, 2018 at 2:49 pm
Unfortunately can’t get it to work on my Mac-mini w/ High Sierra. Take a shot and the
Flash Sync addon will close. Reopen flash sync and it will sync all the images to the
target folder. Take another shot, it will close down again. Rinse repeat. Each time I
reopen it it, it resends every image from card to the target folder, so I end up with
multiple copies of everything in the folder. :-/
Aaron Chan
December 26, 2018 at 9:50 am
ge0kas
January 18, 2019 at 12:22 am
– is there something similar for windows? Can’t afford a Mac right now 🙁
– Can you force the card connect to the router’s existing WiFi ? (as a client) so it is
accessible from all devices in LAN?
Galen
January 18, 2019 at 10:20 am
1) For me, the problem and this solution was a result of trying to use a Mac. Dumped
the Mac and went back to Windows and I’m able to do cabled tethering properly (with
a bit of cable management and more caution on my part).
2) I don’t think that’s how the FlashAir is designed, but I could be wrong. It appears as
an independent WiFi source, so it’s possible that all devices could see it, but not on
the existing network.
Ahmed Helmy
December 22, 2019 at 1:47 am
i need a way to use android with flashair over network , so the card will be connected to
a router with a fixed IP and i need my android tablet to connect to the video files on
card , is there a way for this?