Please watch the video and read the FAQ:http:\/\/www.cameraremotewatch.com\/Open the phone app \"Camera Remote Watch\" (paid app available in iPhone App Store and Google Play Store) and adjust the camera view.On your watch: open the app \"Camera Remote Watch\" and tap the Camera button to trigger the camera shutter on your phone.The photo will be stored in your phone photo gallery and you can access it with the iOS \"Photos\" app or the Android Photo Gallery app.A copy of the photo will be shown on your watch, so that you can check if it looks good or if you should take another picture.Please make sure that the watch and the phone are connected before starting to take pictures. Be patient when downloading the new photo (the watch is slow). If the watch display goes black during the download of the photo, just tap the watch screen to switch the display on again. If the picture download was interrupted by a watch Notification display and stopped working, press the Back button and try again.Garmin requires internet access when they transfer your pictures to your watch.But you can still take pictures when you are offline. Instead of seeing the camera picture on your watch, you will then get a text confirmation that your picture was successfully stored on your phone.When Garmin needs more than 15 seconds to display your picture, the picture download will be aborted and you will get a text confirmation that the picture was successfully stored on your phone. This may be the case if you have a large, high resolution watch display or when the phone connection is slow.Please read the FAQ:http:\/\/www.cameraremotewatch.com\/faq\/All our smartwatch apps and watch faces are free. No In App Purchase, No Ads, No Soliciting for Donations.You pay only one time for the phone app and can switch watches without having to pay again (Fitbit, Android Wear, Garmin, ...)."; var appDescriptionMoreLabel = "More"; Remote control the phone camera shutter from your smartwatch and take a picture without touching your phone.Please watch the video and read the FAQ: the phone app "Camera Remote Watch" (paid app available in iPhone App Store and Google Play Store) and adjust the camera view.On your watch: open the app "Camera Remote Watch" and tap the Camera button to trigger the camera shutter on your phone.

Anybody get a generic bluetooth shutter release remote to work with Photo Pro? I've been able to pair a couple along with its software but did not have any luck getting them to take a picture. Thought it might be tied to the "Use Volume Key as *Shutter*" menu item but that didn't seem to have any effect.


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However, the above video shows that such remote control is achieved using the bluetooth remote shutter. I noticed no external app needs to be installed to use such a remote shutter device. Is the device simply sending a touch event action to the phone?

I found a lot of tips and articles for people who did remote work in places like NYC, or where the subjects themselves had good equipment. But we were going to be working with minimal tools, as my subjects only had Android phones. So, the day before the shoot, I set up pre-interviews with the subjects and ran a bunch of tests.

You can also have your subject share their screen on a Zoom call, then start their camera, but you still need to get someone to press the shutter or have it done remotely. To me, it really only makes sense if your subject has a remote control clicker. So, none of these four ideas were possible this time around.

Tara Todras-Whitehill is a member photographer and a freelance staff member at Wonderful Machine, an art production agency with a network of 600 photographers in 44 countries. The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author. This article was also published here.

I'm glad a lot of people are finding improvements in functionality. For me it's the exact same as the old one - a remote shutter I didn't have to pay any extra for. All the other features are exactly as non-functional as they were on the previous app.

I have updated the X-T5 and installed XApp on an iPhone 14 Pro Max. It pairs quickly, remote shutter works fine, as does settings backup. However press "Image Acquisition / Photography" to get it to connect via wifi and it just craps out when showing images.

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The LowePro PhotoSport Outdoor is a camera pack for photographers who also need a well-designed daypack for hiking and other outdoor use. If that sounds like you, the PhotoSport Outdoor may be a great choice, but as with any hybrid product, there are a few tradeoffs.

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I just "upgraded" to a Galaxy S21 5G from a Galaxy S10+. I have a tripod with a Blutooth remote that I used all the time as I do a lot of hiking. It worked excellent with the S10+ but with the S21 the remote now just adjusts the volume on the phone but doesn't work for the camera. I initially thought it was the remote as I had dropped it in the water a while back even though though it still worked on the S10 after that happened. I ordered a new camera remote, from a different company as the first, and it does the same thing.

I tried all the troubleshooting suggestions and I tried all the things here in the community people suggested for their bluetooth issues such as turning off the wireless sync etc.. Both remotes still only adjust the volume.

Yes. Pairing and connecting is no problem. It's just that it operates the volume on the phone instead of the camera. Plus, I got the new remote two weeks after I had already traded in the S10+ so they were never paired together.

By default Pulse flashes blue when taking a photo. Typically this does not interfere with long exposures or night photography, however you can control the intensity of this light or disable it entirely.

Take photos and videos: Point the phone's camera to the desired location, and then tap Capture on the watch. To record videos, you will need to switch to Video mode on your phone first, and then you can tap Record on your watch. Some camera modes are not compatible with the Camera Controller app.

Can't figure out how to take continuous photos WITH remote, all the information that I find either tells me how to do it without the remote or just tells me how to take a single photo at the time with the remote.

If it turns out that I really can't do this with my camera, WHY CANON? Honestly I don't see why the T1i can't have this option, there really isn't any reason. I hit the remote button and it should be able to trigger whatever options I have selected, including continuous shots while I press the button.

I am not sure why, but it seems there must be some limitation to Continuous shooting when using the Infra Red remote. The same limitation appllies to higher end cameras like the 5D Mk III or 7D Mk II.

The remote has the SAME 3 positions. One wire is the ground. One wire indicates the shutter is half-pressed. One wire indicates the button is fully-pressed. So there is literally no difference in what you can do with the on-camera shutter release vs. the remote shutter release.

An IR remote typically doesn't have those options... the button is pressed or it's not. It emits a pulse of light. Generally it can trigger a single-shot only and has no options. On some models and modes an initial press can "start" an exposure and a second press can "stop" an exposure (and this only works in some modes.) But there's no way to to deal with continuously holding the shutter button. You can't do a half-press for focus, etc.

In "One Shot" drive mode, the camera uses "focus priority" behavior which means the camera can't take a shot until the auto-focus system has been able to confirm focus on at least one active AF point. In "AI Servo" mode, the camera uses "release priority" behavior in which the camera takes the shot when you fully-press the shutter button and it will do so whether or not the camera had time to focus. A sports/action photgrapher knows to half-press the button while tracking the action (so it's continuously maintaining focus) and then fully-press the button when they're ready to take that burst of shots. You really cannot do this with an IR remote.

Mike posted a 3rd party release that gives you the functionality of the wired (3-position shutter button) behavior... but with the advantage of being wireless if you are farther from the camera than the limited distance of a typical wired remote. The real point of the "wired" remote is to ensure that you can take a shot with a tripod-mounted camera without worrying that touching the camera to trigger the shutter will create vibrations that ruin the image.

I used to have the wired version with the remote, (similair to the second device photo in MikeSowsun's post, only it worked with my phone via blue tooth) but the tip broke off into my camera and it was a major hassel to remove it, so I've been a little put off by that type of remote device. But if it's the only way to do what I want I guess I'll look into getting another one. 17dc91bb1f

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