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Establish a wireless connection and take pictures with the camera or remotely from the Android device (see note). View the scene through the camera lens live in the app window. At times like that, every ounce I can save in my bag (such as by using my phone instead of taking my tablet) is a godsend.The Wireless Mobile Utility connects your smart device to Nikon digital cameras wirelessly (via Wi-Fi), letting you download photos, take pictures remotely, and share them hassle-free via e-mail or upload to social networking sites. I do a lot of shoots that involve a substantial amount of hiking, sometimes in severely hot or awful weather.
#NIKON WIRELESS MOBILE UTILITY DOWNLOAD PRO#
If I want to review images in the field, I will connect the D850 or its card to my Surface Pro 7 so that I see the images on a high resolution screen larger than what used to be the size of a snapshot in the film days.
#NIKON WIRELESS MOBILE UTILITY DOWNLOAD HOW TO#
That's exactly what I thought! I could have sworn there was an option to download an "original" size ages ago, but I can't figure out how to do that anymore. No idea how it compares to a D850 though.Īs to your question, in the past, if you downloaded images one at a time with WMU, it would offer a higher resolution option at least when connected I know this because I'm a professional that chose a D750 over a D810 for the reasons above (but most specifically the folding LCD and weight). The feature sets in the cameras are otherwise identical.
#NIKON WIRELESS MOBILE UTILITY DOWNLOAD ISO#
They have identical ISO performance (tho I've seen some say the D750 has better ISO performance - but I've never looked at proper tests) EDIT: D750 has slightly less ISO grain, identical dynamic range, and identical color depth. The benefit of a D810 is a slightly lower ISO floor and higher resolution (which is unnecessary for what I do) but a D750 is lighter, shoots faster, buffers less, and has a flexible LCD. You can't tell me that a D810 is objectively better than a D750 for a professional. I owned one, and liked it, but is not in the same league as a D810, D850, D5, D6, etc. I am sorry but the D750 is a very nice consumer camera. You don't own a professional camera anyway. Even then though, they will not depart from their stated goal of low power, low MP functionality, nor should they since it is quite reasonable. No offense, but if you want additional features then buy a newer camera. This is the point of WMU and nothing more: That is all they have ever billed and it is precisely what is delivered. I am not sure though why anyone would want to look at proprietary RAW files on a screen (more or less) the size of a post card. If you have a modern phone that supports USB OTG, you may be able to find a cable that would suit your needs. Neither app is (or ever was) intended to turn a phone into a glorified image tank, nor are they pro-level remote controls. Even Snapbridge downloads lower MP images for the same reason. As to your question, in the past, if you downloaded images one at a time with WMU, it would offer a higher resolution option at least when connected to an iPad but I now use a D850 so I couldn't tell you if they dropped that setting.īeyond that, the point was to be able to download select images and to see and send images from a phone without draining either battery. If you want to convey attitude as you have above, you might want to own a camera that packs it up or at least know the difference. It was also never meant for professional cameras (its origins was with Coolpix models) and you don't own a professional camera anyway. To start, Nikon WMU is ancient and only supported for legacy devices.