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The review was done using my Panasonic DMC-TZ5 camera that has SDHC and video capability. The card has one year of public wi-fi hotspots (formerly WayPort, but now owned by AT&T) access, geotagging, 4GB SDHC storage and video upload capability. This review card is the highest-end version called the " Eye-Fi Explore Video" that runs $99.99 retail. I received this latest version of the Eye-Fi card thanks to Dave Zatz of ZatzNotFunny! who had reviewed the earlier version of the Eye-Fi card last year. Wayport (Now AT&T) Hotspot for uploads and/or geotagging.Card Dimensions: SD & SDHC standard 32mm x 24mm x 2.1mm.Power: advanced power management optimizes use of camera battery.Storage Capacity: 2.0GB and 4.0GB (1GB is defined as 10^9 Bytes).Typical Range: 90 feet outdoors and 45 feet indoors.Note: Shared WEP and Apple’s version of WEP TSN are not supported. Wi-Fi Security: Static WEP 64/128, WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK Better yet, if you want it to, it tags where you took the photo as well. This new video-aware version along with Eye-Fi's other improvements make the card even better for those that need the process to be crazy-easy or even those that are just don't want to mess with the additional steps required to do all of the above. The original Eye-Fi was a simple, but smart creation. Yes you can do all of this manually with many additional steps, but not this easily. Take most digital cameras, plug in the Eye-Fi SD or SDHC memory card and you can wirelessly transmit photos to your computer and to your favorite online photo/video sharing site and even automatically geotag that photo with the location the photo was taken. The basic premise behind the Eye-Fi is a solid one. I've just received their latest version of the Eye-Fi with many additional features I thought were missing from their earlier product. Eye-Fi over time, also added the ability to wirelessly upload video, geotag the photos with the location taken and added many new online sharing sites. About 2 years ago a small company innovated with something as simple as a camera storage card by sticking wireless connectivity in it and giving the ability to wirelessly transmit photos from a basic digital camera to a computer and online photo site wirelessly.
