I used to take a lot of photos with the best intentions of sharing them with friends and family. But most of the time they just sat on my camera’s memory card, never quite making it to my computer, let alone to my friends and family.
Three weeks ago we made extra storage more affordable for Picasa Web Albums and Gmail, and now we’re making it easier to get your photos in the cloud and share them, right in time for holiday picture snapping. We’ve partnered with Eye-Fi, makers of WiFi-enabled memory cards that make it easy to upload photos directly from your camera to Picasa Web Albums — no cables required. For a limited time, when you buy 200 GB of Google paid storage for $50 you’ll get a free 4GB SDHC Eye-Fi card (a $95 value). The Eye-Fi card lets you wirelessly upload photos and videos directly to Picasa Web Albums or to your computer. It even includes automatic geotagging, so you’ll know exactly where your pictures were taken. And you won’t need to worry about running out of space — 200 GB is enough storage for a hundred thousand original resolution photos. Visit picasa.google.com/eyefi.html to get yours today.
By using Eye-Fi and Picasa Web Albums together, you can automate your photo sharing: photos are wirelessly uploaded and shared with the people that matter. Based on my experience as an avid Eye-Fi user, here’s some tips on setting it up:
Eye-Fi can even make the holidays more fun: With nearly instant access to photos of her grandkids, my mother-in-law felt like she was with us this Thanksgiving, even though she was two thousand miles away!
Posted by Brian Axe, Product Manager
Popularity: unranked [?]
An 8.2-metre optical telescope which forms part of the VLT (Very Large Telescope) in Chile European Southern Observatory astronomers have said they had uncovered the oldest stars in our galactic neighborhood thanks to a massive telescope installed in Chile...
Are they ancient road maps or messages for visiting aliens? Lying at the foothill of Peru’s Andes Mountains is the site of one of the world’s greatest mysteries...
‘ Zahangir Kabir A solar array about the size of one percent the size of the Sahara Desert is good enough to supply the whole world with electric power...