Camera to Web Services Connectors
-
@travisdh1 said in Does ChromeOS make sense for a desktop?:
You say it's state of the art, but doesn't have built in wifi. Doesn't seem like it to me.
Not many phones have the required storage capabilities, either.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@travisdh1 said in Does ChromeOS make sense for a desktop?:
You say it's state of the art, but doesn't have built in wifi. Doesn't seem like it to me.
Not many phones have the required storage capabilities, either.
But if the picture is going immediately from the camera to your phone and then getting uploaded to say next cloud, then the phone does not actually need the storage
-
@JaredBusch said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@scottalanmiller said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@travisdh1 said in Does ChromeOS make sense for a desktop?:
You say it's state of the art, but doesn't have built in wifi. Doesn't seem like it to me.
Not many phones have the required storage capabilities, either.
But if the picture is going immediately from the camera to your phone and then getting uploaded to say next cloud, then the phone does not actually need the storage
Not enough time for that, so it can't. No phone connection is fast enough for that which I mentioned above. I'm often doing this in places where it takes hours or days to upload a shoot and I need another 128GB in the field while the other SD card is uploading.
-
yeah a portable NAS (with battery) with built in wifi AP would be good for that camera situation.
-
@Dashrender said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
yeah a portable NAS (with battery) with built in wifi AP would be good for that camera situation.
NAS on its own generally lacks the flexibility to handle uploading to a service.
All "avoiding a laptop" solutions tend to ignore the fact that you need flexibility to determine how you upload. Unless you control the remote service and can SSH to it or whatever, all packaged devices are going to lack the basic functionality you need.
-
@Dashrender said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
yeah a portable NAS (with battery) with built in wifi AP would be good for that camera situation.
Also... does anyone make a NAS, that is portable, has a battery, and has a wifi access point, and connects to the Internet?
And at what point are you just describing a laptop but calling it a NAS?
-
@scottalanmiller said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@Dashrender said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
yeah a portable NAS (with battery) with built in wifi AP would be good for that camera situation.
Also... does anyone make a NAS, that is portable, has a battery, and has a wifi access point, and connects to the Internet?
I think Western Digital made a portable HDD with a battery and card readers that would automatically copy anything put in the media card slot to the HDD. Don't know if they're still a thing.
And at what point are you just describing a laptop but calling it a NAS?
When you add a screen, duh
-
@scottalanmiller said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@Dashrender said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
yeah a portable NAS (with battery) with built in wifi AP would be good for that camera situation.
Also... does anyone make a NAS, that is portable, has a battery, and has a wifi access point, and connects to the Internet?
And at what point are you just describing a laptop but calling it a NAS?
yeah - rushed post - you're right, it's just a laptop that's needed.
-
@travisdh1 said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@scottalanmiller said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
@Dashrender said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
yeah a portable NAS (with battery) with built in wifi AP would be good for that camera situation.
Also... does anyone make a NAS, that is portable, has a battery, and has a wifi access point, and connects to the Internet?
I think Western Digital made a portable HDD with a battery and card readers that would automatically copy anything put in the media card slot to the HDD. Don't know if they're still a thing.
And at what point are you just describing a laptop but calling it a NAS?
When you add a screen, duh
Well if that's true, that would serve the purpose I was going for - because my thinking was you're in a remote no internet access area, so you'll be plugging the NAS into a laptop when you return somewhere with internet access, but while in the field, you've copied the pictures off the cards so you can keep using them.
-
@travisdh1 said in Camera to Web Services Connectors:
I think Western Digital made a portable HDD with a battery and card readers that would automatically copy anything put in the media card slot to the HDD. Don't know if they're still a thing.
They did, but that lacks the upload function. Getting stuff to an HD isn't an issue normally.