Eye-Fi Share SD Cards

The 32GB Eye-Fi Explore Video card uploads your photos and videos wirelessly from over 10,000 Wi-Fi hotspots. It automatically adds geographic location information so you can easily find and organize your memories. Upload wirelessly on the go. No cables, no hassles, no kidding. It features 32 GB SDHC memory card with built-in Wi-Fi, the ability to effortlessly uploads photos and videos to your computer, unlimited WebShare service to automatically upload to your favorite sharing web site, unlimited Geotagging, which tags photos with where they were taken and one year of Hotspot Access, to upload at thousands of Wi-Fi locations.

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Eye Fi Share Video 4 GB WiFi SD card

Eye Fi Share Video 4 GB WiFi SD card

   US $23.51
Eye Fi Share Wi Fi 2GB SD Camera Memory Card

Eye Fi Share Wi Fi 2GB SD Camera Memory Card

   US $15.01
Eye Fi Geo 2GB SD Memory Card Wi Fi Your Camera New

Eye Fi Geo 2GB SD Memory Card Wi Fi Your Camera New

   US $19.99
Eye Fi Explore X2 8GB Wi Fi SDHC™ Memory Card

Eye Fi Explore X2 8GB Wi Fi SDHC™ Memory Card

   US $67.00
EYE fi Connect x2 4GB Wireless SDHC memory card

EYE fi Connect x2 4GB Wireless SDHC memory card

   US $19.33
Eye Fi 4GB SDHC Wireless Flash Memory Card Video SD NEW

Eye Fi 4GB SDHC Wireless Flash Memory Card Video SD NEW

   US $20.00
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The card continues to support all the good stuff we’ve seen before in Eye-Fi cards: the ability to connect to open access points to upload your photos to a photo service, Wi-Fi-based geo-tagging, and video sharing. But we’re more excited by the improvements in the Eye-Fi Pro.

Now, instead of uploading every image on the card, you select which photos you want to upload by checking the write-protect on the files and the card dutifully uploads them. JPEG, video, and even RAW files are now supported, too. And in case you’re wondering whether RAW is too large to transfer via Wi-Fi, we moved an 18MB RAW file from a Canon EOS Rebel T1i to a laptop in about two minutes using the Eye-Fi Pro’s Ad-hoc mode. Not bad.

While the new Ad-hoc mode is one of the improvements we appreciate about the Pro card, it’s also one of our complaints—the long-sought-after ability to upload without the need for an access point is great to have but not exactly easy to set up. You have to dig through the site’s FAQ for a PDF on how to do it, and even then, you still have to fuss with it. Our other complaint is the size. With 16GB SD cards in the $30 range, a 4GB card, especially one aimed at “pros,” with RAW support is just too small. Still, that doesn’t take away from how cool and useful the Eye-Fi Pro is.