I had access to a sarcasm creator's manual but never any access to a sarcasm detector.
Life is cruel, let's go out shooting (no, a Sony will never hurt ma hand and eye.)
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I had access to a sarcasm creator's manual but never any access to a sarcasm detector.
With a QNAP NAS, your only real option for non-laptop travel is to have a beefy Android phone or tablet (large number of CPU cores and large amount of RAM) loaded with a large-capacity microSD card (512GB-1.5TB) for dumping pics/video, via WiFi or connecting the device to a USB card reader that works with whatever card your camera uses. Later, you can connect the phone or tablet to a high-speed WiFi network and use the Qfile Pro app to upload your files to the NAS, while the phone or tablet is plugged into a high-powered charger for full power and performance during uploading. When you know your files are uploaded, you can wipe them from the microSD card and repeat as needed.
[I need a fingers-crossed emoji here.]With a QNAP NAS, your only real option for non-laptop travel is to have a beefy Android phone or tablet (large number of CPU cores and large amount of RAM) loaded with a large-capacity microSD card (512GB-1.5TB) for dumping pics/video, via WiFi or connecting the device to a USB card reader that works with whatever card your camera uses. Later, you can connect the phone or tablet to a high-speed WiFi network and use the Qfile Pro app to upload your files to the NAS, while the phone or tablet is plugged into a high-powered charger for full power and performance during uploading. When you know your files are uploaded, you can wipe them from the microSD card and repeat as needed.
...so much of this stuff is use-dependent--Camera Connect to an iPhone works well, for a small number of image files, even if only used occasionally.I may try doing it this way.
I wish the Canon Connect app would link to QNAP Cloud or even Backblaze. Oh well, can't have everything!
...so much of this stuff is use-dependent--Camera Connect to an iPhone works well, for a small number of image files, even if only used occasionally.
I just tested it myself (iPhone 12 ProMax from M5MkII...using home WiFi). I probably move files this way a 4-6 times a year. In a pinch, out in the wild, it has saved my butt as far as getting travel pix to friends. But these are small numbers of 'normal' jpegs...
Today, the Canon software worked without a hitch).
Are you moving a large number of photo files? Hundreds? Thousands? RAW?
Are you moving (huge) video files?
This area is clearly one that Canon could lead. For all I know, maybe they are already and I am unaware...
It was a joke. I'll try to make it more funny next time10GB to be a huge collection?
This service is obsolet for any serious photographer having TBs of files
Not to mention videographers having X0TBs of files.
Be happy with Sony (but I am sure you will go on posting here)
Do you really need an app for that? Isn't the camera's built-in FTP transport enough?Has anyone set up FTP transfer with the connect app to a QNAP NAS?
I don't know if it's practical,... but it'd be nice to travel without a laptop.
Do you really need an app for that? Isn't the camera's built-in FTP transport enough?
Not Canon's. QNAPs.It costs money to use Canon's FTP transfer service.
Well, in theory yes. My modem doesn't have a bridge mode and I have stupid Google Wifi and can't get the ports open (holding out for wifi 7 mesh). New modem ordered... I'll be waiting a while on the new router.Not Canon's. QNAPs.
Can't you configure your camera to send the CR3 files onto your NAS directly via FTP(S)?
Has anyone set up FTP transfer with the connect app to a QNAP NAS?
Just got a message they are terminating the Cloud RAW image processing service also.It should come as no surprise, but it looks like the end of the image.canon service. With so many photo storage options, the service never really fit. Please take this communication as notice that the long term 10GB storage service will be terminated on October 31, 2024. If you have original images in 10GB storage,
See full article...
image.canon will terminate the Cloud RAW image processing service in September 2024.
We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause and appreciate your understanding.
Prior to termination of the service, we will terminate the ability to purchase the following plans on May 8, 2024.
[Plans]
・Neural network Image Processing by image.canon monthly (31 days) plan
・Neural network Image Processing by image.canon Additional Plan
It was unclear to me why it was a subscription to start with and furthermore, why it was running in the cloud.Just got a message they are terminating the Cloud RAW image processing service also.
It was unclear to me why it was a subscription to start with and furthermore, why it was running in the cloud.
I don’t mind batch processing hundreds of pictures through dxo/topaz/LR, but having to upload them to someone else’s computer,trust they won’t get stolen/copied/used for AI and then download a huuuuge TIFF sounds like crazy talk to me.
Looking at what I get for the $10-ish per month from Adobe and what other subscriptions deliver, I’d say almost no one is Adobe.It might make sense if your device has not such processing power, but usually it's the training part that requires a lot of computation resources, once the model is built it can often run on smaller hardware. But companies wish to move as much as they can on their system so you need to pay a subscription to do anything - steady cash flow it's what business like. It looks anyway the flow was not good enough, so Canon is shutting it down. Not everyone is Adobe.