World's First Wi-Fi Digital Camera: The Kodak EasyShare-One
The future is now...
Yep, the next big thing in digital photography -- the Wi-Fi digital camera -- is finally available!
- The larger one is an SLR with interchangeable lenses (Canon Digital Rebel D300) and we tote around in a camera backpack when we're going somewhere worth photographing.
- The smaller handheld digital (Kodak EasyShare DX4330
) is the one I always keep on me EVERYWHERE where I go.
While I've raved about the virtues of the Canon D300 before, the point of today's post is: I LOVE the Kodak EasyShare for quick, sharp, hi-resolution, colorful photos!
Plus, I know 3 other people who own a Kodak EasyShare and feel likewise.
Now, the best news...
Kodak has come out with a NEW EasyShare camera (the Kodak EasyShare-one) that lets you wirelessly share your photos -- moments after you snapped them -- right from the palm of your hand.
That's right, there's no computer required!
"The Kodak EasyShare-one is the world's first Wi-Fi consumer digital camera."
EasyShare-One Features
3-inch LCD screen flips out and swivels 180 degrees for incredible shooting anglesNow, with all the wifi hotspots available all over the country, you can send real-time photos to friends and family WITHOUT a computer.
How The Kodak EasyShare-One Works
1. You tap into a wireless network through any hot spot location or a home network.
2. You upload your photos directly from the camera to Kodak's online photo service (formerly called Ofoto).
3. Your friends/relatives can immediately view your photos, or purchase copies at their convenience.
How Much Does The EasyShare-One Cost?
The camera itself is around $600 and comes with everything you'll need to send photos wirelessly via e-mail.

Some may be interested in the optional printer -- for use on the road, or at home:
- The wireless printer dock is $180
- The enhanced photo printer (also works wirelessly) is $200
- The printer dock travel bag is $40
To be safe, most will choose to purchase an additional SD memory card to hold more photos than the camera's internal memory allows. With photography, you never want to "run out of film" (if you're still using a FILM camera) or "run out of space" (if you've gone digital).
---> Your best bet: a 1 GB secure digital card to hold hundreds of photos at the highest resolution.
Did You Know?...
I Have this Camera its soo good and they dont make t no more
Thanks for the info and links!