was browsing through the advertisements for pc show when I noticed cannon has a digital camera with built in wifi at a promotional price of less than 200 dollars. Last heard that flu card is selling at close to a hundred. Cast doubts about it's claim / expectation that flu card will be a disruptive technology. Maybe it's still early days but given trek current rather lofty valuations. I am kinda glad I took profits earlier on. Investors beware.
Good point, greenrookie. I have also noticed a Samsung advertisement on NextInsight for a wi-fi camera. Question is, is this Flucard enabled? Or it is diff tech?
Hi dele, To kill time while waiting for my wife to finished her massage session, I Went to Harvey Norman to ask about cannon cameras with built in wifi capabilities. They have 2 such models, costing 300 plus and 500 plus respectively, and no, it's not using the flu card. FYI only But then, after deeper thoughts, for something to be a disruptive technology, mass market acceptance is more important than 1st mover advantage, think of apple iPod (mp3 player) and it's touch screen tech that's has been around way before apple luanch it's iPad or iPhone. As long as flu card can replace sd card, trek has a winner, just that the path might be be so smooth sailing after all. Btw, just by looking at the pc spec, toshiba and fujisu Pricing is rather uncompetitive compare to Taiwan pc makers acer and ASus. What happen to japan tech companies??
Last edit: 12 years 4 months ago by greenrookie. Reason: More thoughts
This is interesting but it raises more questions. Can greenrookie or anyone help?
1. If some cameras have wi-fi and a normal SD card, then what happens if Japan produces cameras that come with Flucard (which has built-in wi-fi capability)?
So the SD card will die, or so it seems. But is the camera having duplicate wi-fi then?
2. Now the wi-fi capability is not very expensive. But the Flucard is nearly S$100 per piece.