Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Turn your camera into a wifi enabled camera with an Eye-Fi X2 card

The Eye-Fi card is nothing more than a SDHC card with an embedded wifi chip. When the Eye-Fi cards were originally released you could only transfer if you were at home and had your network setup, or by using certain hotspots (only the first year is free). The eye-fi X2 series added a very convenient feature: direct mode. This mode, in combination with an iPhone/iPad or Android application make it very convenient to transfer photos taken from your digital camera and transfer them to your phone from anywhere without the need to use a 3G or wifi connection.

The direct mode uses an ad-hoc network mode which to the phone looks as any other wifi network protected by a WEP key. Aside from a one-time setup to register the card, the transfer process is very seamless. At the time I setup my card I had to install the software on my PC. I'm not sure if you can now do all the setup from http://center.eye.fi/

What's even better is that now there is a wide selection of eye-fi connected cameras. I own a Canon PowerShot ELPH 300 HS, which by the way is a really great point-and-shoot camera. The 300 HS is one of the connected cameras. This means you get an extra menu for 'Eye-Fi Settings' when you're using the eye-fi card. This allows you to disable the wifi feature of the SD card when you don't need to use it.


You will need to recharge your camera's battery more frequently when using the Eye-Fi card. Every time the camera is powered (and there are pictures on the card) it will broadcast a wifi signal for 30 seconds (you can configure it to longer time using their software). The wifi broadcast goes off after a configurable period of time of no activity. When using a connected camera an icon will indicate if the wifi is on:



Another feature that you get with connected cameras is that it will display an icon once a picture has been transferred:


To connect your to your Eye-Fi card using the iPhone application simply power up your camera and connect as you would to any other wifi network. A wifi network that begins with 'Eye-Fi Card' will show up in your available networks. It is protected by a password and unfortunately the only way I know of retrieving the key is using the Eye-Fi center software.


Launch the Eye-Fi Application and you will see the pictures being transferred right away. This application can run in the background so as long as the camera is on and connected via wifi, it will continue transferring in the background. The application has improved a lot since the original version, it now provides more feedback as to what it is doing and the transfer is more reliable.


There are more and more wifi enabled cameras in the market and they are becoming more affordable, but they don't provide the breadth of features available through smartphone applications. Cellphone cameras are also slowly becoming better, however they still lack in zoom, focus, motion and low light performance. If you already have a good point-and-shoot or DSLR camera, this is a convenient and affordable way to transfer your photos into your smartphone when you're on the go. The Eye-Fi Connect X2 4GB retails for only $29.99.


Friday, November 18, 2011

Nest Learning Thermostat unboxing, installation and setup

Got my Nest thermostat installed. It is really an amazing product.


Installation-wise, it is pretty straight forward except for getting the anchors into my drywall. There were two problems: the holes from my old thermostat were around the same location which meant I had to reuse them; and there was a piece of metal (presumably the metal box) on the inside which was probably less than an inch deep, so I had to shorten the anchors provided:

Once I got the anchors into the wall, installation was a 5 minute job:

How cool is this?

It is wifi enabled and it has a trackwheel interface (coincidence Tony Fadell?)


It is a pretty cool product. It will definitely pay for itself on energy savings. You can see more pictures here: http://t.co/Xw5AxHcK

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Enabling Broadcom USH Fingerprint reader on Windows 7 64-bit for DELL Latitude E6500

I recently upgraded my Latitude E6500 from XP to Windows 7 Professional 64-bit. One of the 2 drivers that was not recognized out of the box was the one for the fingerprint sensor.

My first stop was obviously the Dell Latitude E6500 Drivers and Download page from DELL Suport, selecting Windows 7 64-Bit as the Operating System:

I tried with and without my Service Tag. After googling for a while, I found out that the driver is included in the "Dell Security Device Driver Installation Package for 64-Bit Operating Systems". It was hard to find a link to download the latest version of this pack which was compatible with the Latitude E6500 and Windows 7 64-bit, but I finally found it here.

The latest version as of 8/24/2010 was version 1.4.056, A18 released 6/28/2010 and the downloaded file name was: Dell_ControlPoint-Security-D_A18_R269916

You will need to download and install the Dell ControlPoint Security Manager, which includes the EMBASSY Security Center required to use the fingerprint sensor to log into Windows. That too was difficult to find

Latest version as of today was version 1.4.00004, A18 released 7/28/2010 and dowloaded file name: DELL_CONTROLPOINT-SECURITY-M_A18_R276445.exe

You may also want to update the ControlVault firmware (the installer recommends it). I did it just to be safe, though I'm not sure if it was really required. Latest version: 14.x.132.0, A17 released on 5/3/2010

I'm not really sure why these versions and not listed on the Window 7 64-Bit drivers page for E6500, but it sure took me a while to find them on the DELL Support site. I was ready to give up on the fingerprint reader, but I can now confirm that it works prefectly using Windows 7 64-Bit on my Latitude E6500!