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the dane
28-05-2013, 7:28am
Took around 20 photos on the new Nikon, opened a flickr account, and downloaded the 20 photos! it worked but took 40mins!! is this about right? or is my computer to slow???
& has any one used the Nikon WU-1a to transfere photos to a smart phone? & are they worth the $75??
& third and final question, have been looking at a few photos on the forum, a lot of members write back saying (the photo is on an angle, should be straightened, the sky should be chopped, too much light) is this fixed when taking the shoot or on a computer program? and if so what program would I need. mainly for family and holliday shoots?
thanks

paulheath
28-05-2013, 8:00am
sounds like your computer is a little slow , 40 mins is a long time, im not familiar with nikon WU-1a so cant comment. as for cropping, straightening and any other adjustments you have to do that with a computer program, lightroom, photoshop are the way to go, but a free program you can download is Gimp. not as powerful as the others but does a ok job of cropping and straightening as well as adjustments. do you shoot in RAW? as usually the camera manufacture will give you a disk with a RAW program on it that does the job ( canon yes, nikon? )

Old Skool
28-05-2013, 8:14am
What uploader are you using with Flickr and what size photos are you uploading. If they are full size then that time may be right. I use the Flickr Uploadr program on my computer and in preferences you can set the max size / resolution of your pic to be uploaded. I set mine to 1600 pixels across and the program resizes the pics before uploading. I reckon I can upload 100 photos in about 40 mins.

ameerat42
28-05-2013, 8:37am
Well, it's a 24MPx camera, and assuming they were full-size jpegs you were uploading... say... (wave arms a bit here)...
each jpeg was around 8 MBytes, then what's your internet upload speed? Mine's typically about 500MBits/sec (not bytes).
So, 2 mins per photo doesn't particularly sound that bad, as when I upload my full size 15MPx jpegs it can take about the same time per image.

Do you want to run a Bandwidth Meter? Click Here (http://www.speedtest.net/) for one. It'll give you some idea of your internet connection.
You can then look at the file size and go from there.

As for that wireless adapter to download images... I'd have no idea, except that it is 2n compatible, so some speed should apply. However, I suppose you WOULD NOT
be sending the full sized Nikon images to the smart phone.

If you have no other program - but what came with your camera??? Do you use Capture NX or View NX? - there is the free GIMP software at the link:
http://www.gimp.org/

Otherwise, do you have Adobe Photoshop or Elements?
Am.

the dane
28-05-2013, 5:31pm
thanks guys, was downloading photos of 6.4mb! upload speed was 2.29mbps!
so should I be taking photos in RAW or jpeg?
I read that jpeg was more user friendly as in email, facebook etc! and Raw was for fine detail?
cheers

geoffsta
28-05-2013, 5:56pm
Well Dane, 6.4mb is pretty big, even for flickr. Not sure why you are uploading so big.
You are right about jpg being the easier way to go. But as you get more serious about the images you take. RAW is were you want to head

the dane
28-05-2013, 6:51pm
would Adobe PhotoShop Elements 8, be what iam looking for?? just had a quick look on Gumtree and Ebay! or something else, that you can recommend! (Australia only ebay)

ricktas
28-05-2013, 7:24pm
whatever you use you need to resize them, here is a photoshop tutorial, you will just need to adjust the concept to whatever software you get. It is about resizing the pixel dimensions as well as the KB size.

http://www.ausphotography.net.au/forum/showthread.php?14971-How-to-resize-photographs-for-the-Internet

ameerat42
28-05-2013, 8:17pm
thanks guys, was downloading photos of 6.4mb! upload speed was 2.29mbps!
so should I be taking photos in RAW or jpeg?
I read that jpeg was more user friendly as in email, facebook etc! and Raw was for fine detail?
cheers

Dane (The)
Your figure above, is it MBits, or is it MBytes? There's an 8-fold size difference.
If MBits, then I would think it's a bit slow, but if "Bytes", then it's still slow:(
When you quote or cite these figures, do be specific. For example, 1 "byte" = 8 "bits".
Bandwidth is often stated in M(ega)Bits/sec - sometimes MBits/sec. Another measure is called "Throughput" and that is
stated in Megabytes MB/sec or even MBytes/sec. It is unhelpful to use just lower case letters to describe either one.

In my instance as posted - uploads at 500 MBits/sec - that means a "throughput" of approx 62 MBytes/sec. That is why I said that
either way, your speeds are on the low side.

When you run that test, you can copy the results results and paste them in a post like this. You go to "Share", then you select "Copy". It will be in
your Clipboard and then you can post them here, like this (for me):

http://www.speedtest.net/result/2736369083.png

That's a link to an image file that shows the reuslts. I wouldn't mind seeing yours so that I/we might be able to give you better advice.

Am.

PS: To answer the other part of your post, I think Elements 11 is the latest (Sorry if wrong.) But like I said before, it doesn't matter all that much
what you use. The ideas and concepts for image processing are the same across products. That's why I suggested the free GIMP (which I uninstalled a little while back).
But it is free, and it gets you to understand what you're doing with your images. When you move to/can afford Adobe Photoshop or Adobe Elements, you will only
have to learn how to do the same things in that program. The ideas will be the same.

Mark L
28-05-2013, 8:35pm
While you get other software figured here is a free resizer ...... http://bd-sizer.en.softonic.com/
The smaller the file size, the faster it gets onto Flicker (sorry if that sounds obvious). If you are only putting photos there for people to look at then remember that any photos you see here on AP are only 1024 pixels (max) on the longest side and 250 KB (max).

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