Review: Jobo photoGPS for Digital Cameras
I know a lot of people have been after me to test the Jobo photoGPS unit, so when I did the shoot of Tiger Woods at Tavistock a couple of weeks ago, I took the photoGPS along to give it a real world in-field test. After testing it for a while, I called my assistant Brad Moore, who was back at the office, and I said, “Brad, you can’t imagine how much I hate this thing.”
Three Strikes is Not Enough!
Usually, if a product has three strikes against it, that’s enough for me, but this one already had two strike against it before I even left my office so I thought I’d go ahead and give it extra room for a few more strikes just in case it turned out to be worth it in the end. I really wanted to have an open mind give it a fair shake, but here’s how it played out:
Strike One: The GPS unit doesn’t draw it’s power from the camera—instead you have to charge it separately before you use it. It takes two-hours for a full charge.
Strike Two: It doesn’t come with a power adapter to charge it. Instead, you connect it to the USB port on your computer to charge it. What this means is that at some point, when your battery runs down (though it supposedly has a crazy-long battery life), you’d better have your computer nearby or your GPS accessory is done until you can get back to your computer. I didn’t have my laptop with me at the golf tournament, but I didn’t use the GPS long enough for it to run out of battery (you’ll see why soon). Note: there are third-party USB chargers, like Griffin’s which let you charge USB devices right from your car, but of course, you’d have to buy this separately.
Strike Three: The Jobo photoGPS fits sits atop your camera by sliding into your camera’s flash hot shoe mount. I slid mine into the slot, then started to head out to the course. After a few minutes I heard the sound of my photoGPS hitting the concrete sidewalk. I looked down and it was in pieces. I snapped it back together, and to its credit, it still worked. A few minutes later, it fell off again. And again. And again. And then I put it in my camera bag for the rest of the day.
Strike Four: The Jobo photoGPS requires a separate software package for it to do it’s thing (this isn’t that uncommon when geotagging). When you’re finished with your shoot, you have to connect the Jobo photoGPS to the computer where you downloaded the files, using the same included USB cable that you use to charge the unit.
Strike Five: Now, you launch the software and it tries to match the photos with the GPS information that is now downloaded from the GPS unit itself, but you also need a live Internet connection while you’re doing this, so it can ping the main photoGPS server. The software is pretty easy to use—it’s just that you shouldn’t need a software application for something as simple as this. Note: There is another software app for GPS/File matching that’s pretty popular called “HoudaGeo” but it’s an extra $30.
Strike Six: The GPS information is not embedded into the Raw file. Instead it appears in a separate sidecar file, and if the sidecar file and the image file get separated—the GPS information will no longer be with the file. Also, if you’re shooting Raw, and you already have an XMP sidecar file, it won’t write into that XMP file—it has to make it’s own XMP file. (If you shoot JPEG, once it matches everything up, it overwrites your JPEG with a new file that has the GPS info inside it). Worse yet; if you don’t have an Internet connection, don’t even consider working on your raw files (keywording, adding metadata, etc.), because once you match up the GPS info, it will overwrite your XMP files and all your keywords and metadata are gone.
Strike Seven: Since you can only use this on your camera’s Hot Shot flash mount—-you can’t use a flash (pop-up or otherwise).
Up to this point, the only GPS I’ve really spent much time with is the di-GPS mini from Dawn Technology (now for Nikons and Canons), which I love (more than ever, now) because:
(a) it draws it’s power from the camera itself [no charging beforehand].
(b) It stays in the hotshoe (and if it did fall off the hotshoe, the cable connected to your camera’s 10-pin shot would keep it from falling to the ground and breaking,
(c) it doesn’t require any software to work
(d) it embeds the GPS info directly info the file
(e) It doesn’t have to sit in your flash hot shoe, so you can actually use your flash. Instead, you can connect it your camera strap, leaving your flash (and/or hot shoe) still usable.
(f) Unlike the Jobo photoGPS, the di-GPS is nearly invisible to the user. You connect it and it does its thing without any input from you whatsoever.
Pros: The only “Pro” I can come up with is that it will work with digital cameras (including point and shoots) that don’t have a 10-pin connector.
Cons: Seven Strikes! If I had to go through all this to get GPS data into my files, I simply wouldn’t do it (unless it was absolutely required by my line of work).
The Bottomline
In some ways, the idea is great, and offers those who don’t have the necessary 10-pin port (the same one where you’d plug-in a cable release on your camera) required by GPS units like di-GPS a way to have access to GPS data for their images. However, in my opinion, the Jobo photoGPS is a poor choice for anyone that can use just about anything else. It’s a hassle to use, it falls off easily (which makes it prone to break), and has too many disadvantages to make it a viable choice, especially for working pros.
I just got Nikon’s new GP-1 GPS in-house, and I’m curious to see how this compares to the di-GPS, because sadly the Jobo photoGPS won’t even be in contention. The unit sells for around $170.




















Wow! I think this is the first time I have seen a real world test that is (obviously) not funded by the manufacturer of the reviewed item.
It must also be the first real world test that points out all of the faults that were found during testing.
I can’t work out how anyone makes an informed decision about camera gear. All you ever see are glowing reports where the pros outweigh the cons every single time. As for forums – everyone has a barrow to push and the chances you will get an unbiased opinion are exceedingly rare.
I applaud your audacity! Keep up the good work…
Oh no, now all the Jobo fans (both of them) are going to get on here and start flaming the place up. Well, one “Pro” I can think of- it will make a great gift for someone you don’t like!
Thanks for that Scott. I think we are getting so used to these separate gadgets to run seamlessly with our stuff and anything other than seamless is a big hassle.
I think I shall wait for the built-in GPS DSLR. Maybe they’ll have a motion sensor in them as well so not only do you get your GPS location, but the position of your subject as well -that would be cool!
James Walker
Freiburg, Germany
Jobo=overpriced+badly designed. Been like that since their days manufacturing wet chemistry products. Sad.
Very good review, I think the next time I plan on buying something I will have you try it first.
Glad I didn’t get that one! I’ve got the GeoPic II and it’s great. The only thing I don’t like about it is the beeping noise it makes when the gps is locked in (you can turn it off, but I forgot how, and I thought I already did it once so you might have to do it every time you use it??) and the second is that it screws into the terminal so it’s not easy to get on/off (but if it falls off the hot shoe it just dangles). Other than that it works great!
One odd but nice thing about it, it uses a Canon style shutter release cable that you plug into the GPS. The guys at ritz were very confused when I walked in with a D300 asking for a Canon shutter release cable. Even more confusing was they thought the D300 had GPS built in already….. … LOL I just walked out “agreeing” with them that it was the D700..
Thanks for the review, Scott, saved me some money. BTW, you might want to check out Joe McNally’s blog to see why there has been a sudden dip in your book sales…
Thanks for sharing that Scott….
In the future I’d like to have your thoughts on Vari ND singh-ray filter
Maybe an idea for an upcoming review…..
Scott, its a rare day when a “big name” photography writer says “don’t buy this peice of crap!” in public. You just went up a few notches on the “gotta believe this guy”scale. Most of the other photo writers and publications would just be quiet about it.
Soon you will be sprouting a beard and muttering about an 11th commandment!
quick question – in hopes of some redeeming feature. Sony used to have a device like this, but because it is a GPS that didn’t feed to the 10 pin you don’t really need to have it on the camera at all. Can you just turn it on and leave it in your bag or hanging off something?
Hi James,
Yes Sony makes one that doesn’t have to be on the camera at all. Here’s my review of it:
http://terrywhite.com/techblog/?p=274
Even though the Sony one works (seemingly a lot better than the one Scott reviewed), you can’t beat having one that feeds right into your camera at the time you take the picture. However, if your camera doesn’t have this ability, the Sony one is probably the next best thing (that I’ve tried). Using it with HoudaGeo rocked. Now I’m using the di-Pro GPS and haven’t looked back.
My review of that one is here too:
http://terrywhite.com/techblog/?p=786
Wow – a scathing review from SK – this does not bode well for Jobo…good info though Scott, thanks. (Not going to be buying anything from Jobo in the foreseeable future…)
I guess I don’t understand why you would use any device that sat in a hot shoe [or near your camera] that you needed to sync the metadata back on your computer and didn’t write straight to the file in camera. There are so many GPS loggers out there — including high end cell phones or traditional GPS devices that you already have — that you can have anywhere on your person or your bag and have it record your position. James above mentions a Sony unit — GPS-CS1 — which is what I currently use when shooting, doesn’t sit in a hot shoe and uses a single AA battery — and it costs about $100. I’m not sure if the photoGPS /needs/ to be in the hot shoe to work, or its just where they think is “convenient”, but if it needs to be that’s pretty damn silly.
As for software, the FREE GPSPhotoLinker for OS X can do the matching and writing of metadata for you based on time stamp of the GPS tracks and the EXIF data on the image. It can do it offline as well [though if online you can ping a web service to turn the coordinates into country and location names]. The Sony device came with software, but I prefer this software. http://www.earlyinnovations.com/gpsphotolinker/
There’s also a Lightroom plugin that does this after you’ve imported files into Lightroom, it works quite well, but the way and locations the data is written I’ve found it sometimes gets lost when doing things like editing in photoshop. http://regex.info/blog/lightroom-goodies/gps
The Gisteq PhotoTrackr is a cheaper and better solution. It doesn’t bother with the hot shoe at all – if you’re going to use software to link up the GPS tracks to your images after the fact, why not just have the GPS device completely separate? This is just a little $80 unit I can throw in my camera bag, takes AA batteries, adds metadata to almost any RAW file (DNG included), works in Linux, etc…seems to solve all of the issues with the Jobo.
I also have the Gisteq, and I like it. Like a lot of these units, though, it cannot go the whole day on one set of betteries, so be prepared to put in a new AA every four or five hours.
I didn’t know that Gisteq’s own software would tag RAW files. Maybe my software needs an update. I have been using Brezze Systems’ excellent Breeze Downloader for that (somewhat more flexible than Lightroom for creating filename templates and organizing downloaded files), but it does create XMP files. Whether these files would overwrite an existing XMP file I don’t know. Since I geotag right out of the camera, I never have an XMP file beforehand.
Avoid the Sony unit, as it is particularly insensitive.
i use my iPhone with Trails, which works well. I can use HoudahGeo or Jeffrey’s GPS Plugin to marry up the GPX file and the images in Lightroom.
Hey Scott, thanks for the review. Do you think you’ll be able to do a review between the di-GPS mini and the Nikon GP-1 unit? I’ll be in the market for a GPS unit in the next couple of months and this the is review that really interests me!
Thank you for your honesty. So many times “reviews” sound like bad promotions. I feel bad that Jobo has to take the hit, but maybe the honesty will cause them to improve on their design. I am looking forward to your GP-1 review. Thanks and keep up the good work!
Scott, Can I borrow it the next time I go bowling?
I’m glad you posted this review. A lot of folks don’t like to publish negative reviews, but I think it’s important for potential buyers to get the news about a product, good or bad.
So far, everyone seems to have kind words for the DI-GPS. I was a little put off at first about ordering something without a US distributor (maybe that’s changed by now), but it seems they’ve built a good reputation for delivery, too.
I’m not reading good things about the Nikon GP-1 on customer reviews. It’ll be interesting to get your take on it.
Scott – the simplest solution I’ve found to date is to carry a regular GPS with you and use RoboGeo (www.robogeo.com) to geocode the files. This works as a great alternative until all camera’s have GPS built into them.
Scott,
I geotag all the time. I use my plain old garmin GPS (that I bought for geocaching) and some free downloadable software.
I have a small (80K) pdf on how to do it and will happily share it if you or anyone can give me a place to post it.
I’m glad to read this. I had seen some other reviews and went out and bought one and used it last weekend for the first time. The biggest “strike” for me was the fact that it did not write to the RAW file so while I supposedly got all the GPS information integrated none of it went anywhere. Such a waste of money.
Amazes me that I can’t find a simple yet effective GPS tagger for my Canon. Someone needs to make one!
Thx for a candid review, like other people have mentioned, its good to see a honest review. I had already seen that you needed internet connection to use their software, that was the main reason i held off bying it
I recommend you put your review on adorama or amazon
I gotta say something. Your comparing and $80 unit and complaining about buying extra software, etc… and the unit your suggesting would cost me $3,000 to put on my Canon 1DmkII.
Apples and oranges………………….
Not really. Scott’s writing a review on the Jobo unit first and foremost, then only at the end includes what he likes instead. The “faults” of the Jobo unit still applies whatever price-point it is at. Not a good one at all.
Thanks for the review, it makes me feel even better that I didn’t go the hot shoe route for my geotagger, Jobo or otherwise! I prefer the data logger method personally as I want a track log if I’m photographing out and about. I just picked up an AMOD AGL3080 data logger and it’s excellent with a few quibbles… mainly that it uses 3 AAA’s (always left with one oddball from a pack or a single spare rechargeable) and if I had my choice, it WOULD be rechargeable from USB. I already have three other devices that are charged via a USB plug (via computer, wall plug or car cigarette lighter). The only other thing I would change is that it wrote to an SD or microSD card so it’s expandable… although right now it will log weeks worth of data so not a big issue.
Since everything I shoot goes into Lightroom, combining the track logs and photos is easy using ‘Jeffrey’s “GPS-Support” Geoencoding Plugin for Lightroom’. I already have a workflow that utilizes saving and reading XMP metadata for other items so this too is not a problem. Actually, the XMP problem is more because of LIGHTROOM’s metadata editing limitations than anything else.
Hot-shoe taggers in my opinion offer a very limited function for the money cost and loss of external flash capability. The datalogger/time-sync method is far more flexible (for use of data) and cheaper, and the only downside right now is the couple extra clicks it takes to marry the data with my photos. I don’t see the convenience of having the data embedded at the time of capture worth the HUGE cost (relatively speaking) of the Jobo, di-GPS or Nikon methods. I only paid $60 and a few minutes of setup.
The fact that it sits in the hotshoe would’ve negated it for me anyhow.
Thanks for the most candid review I’ve read in a while.
Wow Scott, thanks for the most honest review I’ve read in awhile.
I’m new to photography, but I can honestly tell you we need more reviews like this. With lens (and other product) reviews sometimes I find myself saying “wow, was that a review or a product add?”
I bought this product a few months ago.
My experience is identical to Scott’s. The worst purchase I have ever made.
I plan to smash it to a million pieces as soon as I can find a sledgehammer:
a. To make sure no one else shares my frustration with this unit.
b. To release the frustration of been so stupid to purchase such a product in the first instance.
I too appreciate the honest and candid review. I have been looking for something GPS related for my D70 for a while. I’m glad I know to stay away from this one!
The thing that really struck me was the need for an Internet connection to work. I work with GPS devices and data often at work (unfortunately, the GPS devices that we have are quite large and not necessarily great units). You don’t need an Internet connection anywhere in the process unless you want to view the data on Google or Yahoo maps. If you have a local source of data (such as what one would have with an in-car navigation system or a hand-held GPS device), you don’t need an Internet connection at all.
Thanks also to those that have left good solutions in the comments. Those are really helpful.
Andrew,
I too own a D70. I actually bought this device and enjoy using it… Why? Because I own a D70 that does not allow me to use Nikon’s new GP-1 GPS or similar product. When I can afford to buy a D300 I will buy the GP-1 GPS as well.
Scott points out many flaws but I do feel that some are over stated. Points 1,2 and 4 are not as big of an issue for my work flow.
1) separate battery issue – I like the fact that the unit does not use power from my D70, the first recharge does take 2 hours, as do many rechargeable electronic the first time you recharge it. But recharging the device later is much faster because the unit only draws power when you take a picture.
2) the device take a mini usb plug, found on many chargers. I have charged it from my computer, my ipod wall/car charger and from my car GPS unit. For me these are usually very easily available. Also since the device only uses power when you take a picture, I have had the device run for more than 10 hours before asking for a charge.
4) Separate software: Yes it sucks to have to use separate software but short of buying a a new camera I will have this problem.
Point 5 is inherent to the way the device works. The device only records the location of the gps satellites not your location, hence the quick response time and low battery usage. The software and internet connection are needed to look up what history of the satellites and translate that into a location. Other loggers not attached to a camera constantly find the satellites and then translate that in to a location. The Sony one I tried ran out of batteries in 3 hrs of usage because it was doing so much work. As I stated before the photo gps has worked for over 10 hrs for me (I’m not even sure I needed to recharge at that point I just happened to be downloading images)
Points 3,6,7 I totally agree with. Falling out of the hot shoe issue really does not seem like it should have been that hard for them to figure out in the first place. 6 hopefully can be fixed by firmware/software and 7 is just a design flaw that may never get resolved.
I think Scott’s review was very good but not complete for those of us who do not have or can not afford a camera with dedicated gps input .
When I buy my next Nikon I will happly stop using the this device but until then it does what I need.
John
Thanks Scott for taking the time to review this photo GPS unit. I purchased this product two months ago and have been so frustrated by its shortcomings that I now refuse to even put it in my camera bag. When I did use it, the GPS data it generated showed fairly accurate coordinates but when the software embedded the data into JPEGs and I read the shooting info in Canon DPP, the locations were off by hundreds of miles. I double checked and rechecked for any software installation problems but could not identify any. I am not going to waste any more effort trying to get this product to function correctly. I will, however write a review for the NY store website where I purchased it.
Thanks, Scott for presenting, as always, an unbiased opinion. Your honest and integrity are much appreciated. Keep up the good work!
I’m using the Blue2CAN from Red Hen Systems. This Bluetooth unit plugs into the 10-pin connector on the front of my Nikon D3. I use a small Bluetooth Wintec GPS receiver. There is no configuration for the unit and metadata is recorded to your image. I have been well satisfied with this system.
Thank you Scott, for your review and also thank you for all the other training and comments that you do. I agree with others we need more candid reviews. I am now just finding all the trick, tips,training and blogging for photography it has renewed my enthusiasm for photography. I too just bought the di-GPS pro, it works very well the only 2 negatives that I have run across is there is no lock on the foot of the hot shoe and it’s lock up time I think is slow although I understand that when you go into a new area it takes longer to lock up the first time. Otherwise it is great and I would highly recommend this unit. It blew me away when I first tested it in front of my house and when looking on Google earth it showed exactly where I was standing, which was in the middle of the street. Oh what fun toys.
I have been playing with geotagging for a little over a year. When I bought mine, I got a RoyalTek 2300. First and foremost, it is CHEAP.
It has a rechargable battery, and just logs the trip data. Once I am done, I get it home, hook it up via Bluetooth to my PC, and download the trip file(s). It is very simplistc.
From there, I open up a program called Geosetter (http://www.geosetter.de/en/). This program seems to be the best I have used so far, it is ALSO free. You have to play with it, to get your data to sync. THAT is a pain, but after a bunch of practice, I have gotten to the point I am pretty fast at syncing.
While Geotagging is kind of a hassle, it is also very cool. It is fun to see it on maps. The GPS coordinates can also be downloaded into a trip file, to see where you went.
I am still trying to figure out how to integrate it into my workflow, well.
Personally I think USB charging is the best way to recharge. It is very easy to get AC to USB converters and car DC to USB converters.
Also most future cell phones are going to be using mini-USB (or maybe micro-USB) for charging them.
I’d agree that in amongst the aparent uselessness of this gadget, usb conectors for charging are a godsend as it means less stupid adaptors to carry that work with only one device of the umpteen chargable devices that I have to carry with me. My phone plus in to computer or wall socket for recharging as I have a plug that has a mini USB socket for charging that simply fits into any wall socket.
I went on a job recently and the only non usb connecters were standard wall plugs with the near universal small two pin connectors. So loads of devices and only two power connections types needed which means carrying spares is easy as opposed to near impossible.
I’ve long asked for phones to be USB chargable as they all need to connect to a computer these days and a mini usb means less space required as well and now they are being forced to do so to reduce wastage with all the incompatible chargers that currently exist, even amongst same make of phones.
I guess they should have taken their time and spent ANOTHER 2 years in development. What a shame.
I’ve made exactly the same experience with this application. Thanks for your review!
I would like to offer a Blu2CAN for a real world GPS test.
800-237-4182
Bluetooth to Camera Area Network (Blue2CAN) is an integrated solution for geo-tagging digital still images with GPS data. It uses a Bluetooth enabled GPS unit, combined with industry leading Nikon D200, D2X, D2Xs, D2Hs, D3 and D300 product lines to directly capture geospatially referenced images. It provides the easiest, most reliable collection method today.
http://www.redhensystems.com/products/product.php?product_id=1
Most useful. I was previously tempted by this and couldn’t find any independent reviews. Don’t think I’ll be bothering now!
Scott: You compare Jobo GPS with the di-GPS which
is unfair. These two GPS are designed for different cameras. Jobo GPS is designed for all the cameras including point and shoot, Nikon and Canon and many others. Di-GPS isdesigned only for GPS enabled Nikon DSLR.
Jobo GPS does not connect to the camera. It does not have to sit on
the hotshoe. It actually saves the GPS data in the unit. To match the GPS data with the digital picture, users need to use a computer and software.
The di-GPS sends the GPS signal directly into the Nikon DSLR camera
and and Nikon DSLR can embed the GPS signal into the digital picture. This, it connects to the camera with a 10-pin cable and does not require any additional software or computer.
Since Jobo GPS does not connect to the camera, it has to have a build
in rechargable battery. The GPS chipset uses about 45mha. So the
rechargable battery has to be 700mha or more. Therefore, the rechargable battery takes 2 hours to recharge.
Di-GPS draws the power from camera. When the GPS is on, a D300 will run out of power in around 500 shoots (instead of the 1000+ shoots without the GPS). Therefore, I would like to see di-GPS has a build-in rechargable battery.
None of the above unit has a build-in eletronic compass which can provide heading information to the picture.
recharge.
Being slightly biased since I have a photoGPS, I would at least like to add a few points here.
Yes, it sits in the hot shoe. So what? I don’t use GPS indoors (no reception anyway), and I don’t use flash outdoors. If you do, it is a problem of course.
The charging is really not an issue unless you take an insane amount of pictures. After a 4 day trip with ~400 pictures taken it recharged in a couple of minutes, apparently it had lots of juice left.
I’ve never had mine fall off, even once. Sure, I didn’t feel comfortable sticking it out from the car window doing 90 km/h, but I did bird shooting, took pictures in skii slopes etc. Never fell off. Maybe it’s just a matter of camera model and fitting or something.
I agree it is very odd that the software doesn’t add the GPS tags to the RAW files but puts them in a sidecar, but it was trivial to script and fuse them back using ExifTool [1]. In general, the software sucks, but it somehow manages to do its job. You can also download (save, archive) the contents of the device into a directory to process it later, so _if_ you run out of shots (1000) its quick and easy to back them up, clear the device and keep going.
Requiring USB to charge is not an issue for those of us who dont use card readers, but directly connect the cameras to a _Mac!_, it recharges when you’re downloading the data. You wont run out of battery until you’ve taken 1000 pictures, and by then you need to connect it to a computer anyway.
The reason you need to be online when “tagging” is because you dont have the GPS locations, but some satellite tracking data, on your USB. Thats why it gets a position instantly (under a second) and then shuts down again, waiting for your next photo to be taken.
It took me roughly 10 minutes (including download times via USB) to get my 400 pictures from the trip off the camera+gps, correctly geotagged and ready for processing.
I won’t say this device is the blessing for everyone in any way, I just wonder what kind of dancing Scott Kelby did to have it fall off all the time
Love your books btw!
-
[1] I’m a professional software engineer, so it may take a little more time for non-experienced programmers, but it’s just a matter of using the command line tools.
Thanks for the review Scott. You’ve just saved me wasting money!
I think that, for the time being and someone can come up with a solution for working with a Canon, I’ll resurrect my old note book and sharpen my pencil!
I bought a Jobo photoGPS to use with my Canon 400D/Digital Rebel and returned it after a few days.
The best I could get out of it was tagging one photo in 10 correctly – even after extending the delay between shutter firing to GPS capture to the full three seconds to minimise the effect of any electronic interference from the camera.
Twice I took more than 70 pictures without one being tagged.
What happens if I download the pics and the GPS data from Jobo’s PhotoGPS to my computer and I have NO internet connection? Can I match the pics and their location later on at home? Can I match my pics and their location after I have re-named the pics?
Thx for your input.
Marianne (not bought a Jobo yet…)
Marieanne,
You can download the gps location data to your computer and later when you get an internet connection tag your photos.
I have done this a few times. You will need to save the data to a different folder each time, the software will try and overwrite the data if you don’t. The software needs some tweeks still.
John
Now on my second Jobo PhotoGPS, the first one just would not get a position fix.
The replacement came the other day and works so fast it nearly knocked me off my chair. I am very pleased with this bit of kit, it does exactly what it says on the tin.
However, it does need a locking screw of some kind once pushed into the hot shoe to prevent a disaster underfoot!!
The di-gps USB will kind of work with Canon’s according to there web site, but at only 1000 captures, no tracks, and apparently it makes using a remote release impossible.
Most outdoor photographers are going to be using a remote release, so that seems like a really wierd thing to do (no pass through, yeah the pro model has it but not the usb model)
At $200 this does not seem to be such a good deal, for about $100 I can get a model that tracks and matches up all photos for the canon’s on the computer
Have no Idea if the Jobo would work or not, but also seems kind of pricey for what it does.
Todd, sorry but this is non sense.
di-GPS USB has no limit on captures as it writes directly into the pictures (RAW/JPEG) unlike Jobo that saves raw GPS data to be postprocessed.
As it is plugged into the WFT-E (wireless adaptor) it does not have any affect on remote controls!
The problem is that some funny boy at Canon had the idea to say: “OK lets take the expensive WFT that people mostly use in Stuios without any GPS signal and sense to geotag as an interface for geotagging.”
I guess this guy ate a big and funny clown that day for breakfast. It is so nuts!
Picture here: http://gps-camera.eu/images/stories/dawntech/dawntech_usb_1ds_orig_600px.jpg
Works for thes Camera / WFT combinations:
Canon EOS 5D Mark II / WFT-E4
Canon EOS 40D / WFT-E3
Canon EOS 50D / WFT-E3
Canon EOS 1D Mark III / WFT-E2
Canon EOS 1Ds Mark III / WFT-E2
Thats it
Scott,
did you ever get to play with the GP-1 from Nikon. I appreciate the thrashing of the Jobo, but now I am looking at the GP-1 and would like to know what you thought of it. Moose loves it I know, but thats just one review. What did you think?
thanks, John
Solmeta Geotagger N2 Kompass has auto-indoor function and a kompass saving the direction of view.
Dawntech Pro Logger has auto-indoor, additional tracklogger (260.000 points), pseudo-direct-start.
Why bother for GP-1 that has not even an on/off switch but consumes up to three hours of camera power after shutting the camera off? For the brand logo on it?
Hi,
I bought this Jobo Photogps (unfortunately, not having found this page). I see another issue – Picture 1: Longitude 180 Picture 2: Longitude 67 Picture 3: Longitude 48. Hmmm. This continued for the 24 pix I shot as a test run over five minutes. Each time, JOBO flashed a green LED indicating success. Anyone else seen this issue?
Tx,
Steve
Scott, your review sucks. Get an iphone, you’ll be happier geotagging with it.
Thanks for the info. I found it really useful.
Political Planning,level contract administration lose walk throughout would farmer provided component human basic illustrate settle sum think selection campaign link attractive tone analysis tear labour define night both computer teach week demand device us short yet their start show essential earn touch commission link motion evening beneath fund me read resource connection one ministry remain population frequently standard nothing tea rather plate race century explanation ministry mile previously right measure appoint kid road vehicle pay jump wish carry buy tooth bone let computer sheet garden hard look statement closely object offer