The camera is connected through a Canon WFT-E7 transmitter using an Ethernet cable to our office network, while the iPod is connected to the same network via Wi-Fi.Ĭlick here to watch the video on our YouTube channel. I’ve recorded a short video showing the entire pairing and reading procedure between an iPod touch and my EOS 7D Mark II. Mind this when establishing the connection. ShutterCount relies on the camera’s more advanced EOS Utility connection mode (and thus will not work with the simple smartphone connection mode). Plus you can access these logs through iTunes file sharing.īecause of the network connection required to the camera, you’ll need to do an extra step before the reading – pair the app and the camera. So at the moment it will work with the following Canon EOS cameras: 6D, 70D (using built-in Wi-Fi) 5D Mark III, 7D Mark II (using WFT-E7 transmitter) 1D X, 1D C (using built-in Ethernet or WFT-E6 transmitter).įeature-wise it is equal with the Mac version – besides a simple reading it sports history logging, with the ability to copy the logs into Apple’s Numbers or Microsoft Excel. Either built-in, or utilizing an external Wireless File Transmitter. Since Apple does not provide a way to control a camera via USB from an iOS device, ShutterCount Mobile relies on Wi-Fi or Ethernet connection and thus supports cameras having one of those. It runs on 64-bit devices running iOS 9 or later (that is: iPhone 5s or later, iPod touch 6, iPad Air or later, iPad mini 2 or later, iPad Pro). ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() My ShutterCount app is now available on iOS!
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