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ich weiß, es ist ein leidiges Thema, aber ich muss es ansprechen: Werbung, Werbeblocker und Finanzierung des Forums.
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mschaa schrieb:Nur zur Info.
Der Camera Connector ist nun bei Apple im shop erhältlich.
Ich habe einen bestellt und werde nach Erhalt und Test (ca. 8 Tage) darüber mal kurz berichten.
Gruß
Michael
Directly and properly is perhaps an understatement. In our first test, the Digital Camera Link transferred 28.8 megabytes of photos from our S400 in 76 seconds, a rate of 2.64 seconds per megabyte. The card inside was a Lexar 8X card. This represented a dramatic improvement over our previous Media Reader transfer speed, which transferred 50 megabytes in 200 seconds, a rate of 4 seconds per megabyte.
We were pleased by the improvement, and figured that our second test camera - Canon's 10D digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) - might outdo it. Designed for professionals and high-end "prosumers," the $1500 10D is the sort of camera owned by people who complain about slow Media Reader transfer rates. With a 6.3 megapixel imager and the ability to write gigantic RAW format image files, the 10D screams for fast, high-capacity media, and owners typically buy Microdrives, single or multi-gigabyte memory cards, or portable storage devices, if not all three.
We tried the Canon 10D outside with a 12X Lexar memory card packed full of 5 megabyte RAW images. First, we couldn't see the indications on the Digital Card Link's screen, and didn't know why it wasn't transferring. Then we came to realize that the red lights were flashing to indicate that the camera was incompatible with the DCL, a major blow.
For kicks, we tossed the 12X card into our S400 and tried to see if the DCL would successfully transfer all the RAW files onto the iPod regardless of the fact that the camera did not support the RAW format. Lo and behold, the files transferred directly and properly, and again, that was an understatement. This time, the DCL transferred 245.4 megabytes of images in 503 seconds, a rate of 1.98 seconds per megabyte.