- #NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED MAC OS X#
- #NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED FULL#
- #NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED PRO#
- #NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED PLUS#
- #NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED PROFESSIONAL#
#NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED PRO#
Take Control of Your Photography-Remotely: Using the included USB or Firewire cable and/or optional WiFi adapters for select models, Nikon Camera Control Pro enables you to capture unique images no matter what the subject.Miscellaneous: CD-ROM drive required for installation Internet connection may be required IEEE 1394 connection (D1 series) not supported with Macintosh computers with Intel Processors.*Operation when connected with USB Hub device or IEEE 1394 Hub device is not guaranteed.IEEE 1394: Only OHCI-compliant boards supported.Interface*: USB: Only built-in USB ports supported.Monitor: 1,024 x 768 pixels or more 24-bit color (True Color) or more.
#NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED MAC OS X#
#NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED PROFESSIONAL#
Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate (32-bit version) Microsoft Windows XP Professional (Service Pack 2) Microsoft Windows XP Home (Service Pack 2) Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional (Service Pack 2).Windows OS Operating Systems: Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic (32-bit version) Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium (32-bit version) Microsoft Windows Vista Business (32-bit version) Microsoft Windows Vista Enterprise (32-bit version).Model: PowerPC G4 or G5, or Intel-based Macintosh (Intel Core Solo, Intel Core Duo, Intel Core 2 Duo, Intel Xeon).The LR team is likely not ignoring the importance of reliable tethering, I'm just not convinced they have solved all the problems yet. If Nikon Capture works reliably as you have indicated, then I wonder if the additional cost might be worth it just to have a reliable connection for every shoot (especially when weighed against the cost of the other Nikon gear). Whether or not LR4.1 does the job any better remains to be seen. So there's some set of hard-to-find circumstances that still causes failure(s) during a shoot. Prior to that shoot, I hadn't had problems for a while with LR3.6 tethering, and thought they might have pinned down the cause of the failures. I thought that LR 3.6 had tethering issues fixed, but during a recent shoot it failed miserably.I had to actually restart the Macbook to get things going again. Tethering in LR seems to have continuing issues as well, so I wouldn't hold my breath that they are going to get it right (there's multiple discussions out there about poor reliability when tethered to LR). sounds like it continues to have issues like I have read about. I reckon it's not long until we get support direct in LR so my advice is to be patient unless you REALLY have to have it, I don't think the cheaper work arounds are any good and the cost of NCP2 are too much to justify.ĭ4's and D800's are such a good studio camera that I can't see Adobe ignoring the need to add tethering at some point in the near future.especially when Apple already have this function, it can't be beyond the capability of a programmer at Adobe to produce it! I suppose you could just get the WT4 nikon wireless, but it's so expensive for what it is!
#NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED FULL#
Tried Eye-Fi which works really well, however, at full image quality or RAW it takes up to 45 seconds to download to the macbook which again, in our studio this just isn't going to cut it. The other bit I don't like is that you can't switch between manually taking a shot direct from the camera (Pressing the shutter release) and clicking via an Icon on the software.
#NIKON CAMERA CONTROL PRO 2 NO CAMERA DETECTED PLUS#
Sofortbild isn't quite right - it causes the camera displays to constantly flash which isn't a good sign, plus not very reliable over a longer shoot. The only reliable tethered option for the D800 that I have found is Nikons Control Pro 2 (Import to LR via watched folder etc).