Product Description
This Toshiba AC Adapter is a 45W external AC adapter designed to work with a wide range of legacy Toshiba notebook models and the newer Portege 2000/2010, 3500/3505, 4010, M100 and R100 series portable computers. It is lightweight with a small form factor, making it ideal for taking on the road. Main FeaturesManufacturer: ToshibaManufacturer Part Number: PA3241U-2ACAManufacturer Website Address: www.toshiba.comProduct Type: AC AdapterInput Voltage: 100 V AC to 240 V AC Output Power: 45WCompatibility: Toshiba Satellite Series Notebooks: 200, 220, 300, 310, 320, 330, 1555CDS, 2060, 2100, 2140XCDS, 2180CDT, 2210CDT/XCDS, 2230, 2250, 2505CDS, 2510, 2520, 2530, 2540, 2550, 2590CDT/CDS/CDT/XDVD, 2610, 2615DVD, 2650, 2655XDVD, 2670, 2710, 2740, 2750, 2770, 2800/2805, 4000CDS/CDT, 4005CDS/CDT, 4010CDS/CDT, 4015CDS/CDT, 4020CDT, 4025CDT, 4030CDT, 4060, 4070, 4080CDT, 4090XDVD, 4100XDVD Toshiba Satellite Pro Series Notebooks: 430, 440CDT/CDX/CS, CT, 445CDT/CDX, 460CDT/CDX, 465CDT/CDX, 470CDT, 480CDT, 490CDT/XCDT, 520CDT, 550CDT, 4220, 4260DVD, 4280XDVD, 4300 Toshiba Portege Series Notebooks: 2000, 2010, 3500, 3505, 4010, 7000CT, 7010CT, 7020CT, 7140CT, 7200CT/Cte, 7220Cte, M100, M300, R100, R200 Toshiba Tecra Series Notebooks: 520CDT, 550CDT and 8000 series Toshiba Libretto Notebooks: U100 U105Standard Warranty: 1 Year(s) Limited
Product Description
Flowing manes blend into crashing waves on these deep bronze-finished bookends that are perfect for the horse lover.
Alabastrite. Liberty Bronze Collection. Each is 4" x 4 1/2" x 6" high.
Product Description
Flowing manes blend into crashing waves on these deep bronze-finished bookends that are perfect for the horse lover. Alabastrite. Liberty Bronze Collection. Each is 4" x 4 1/2" x 6" high. Pair
Product Description
Save 10% on each participating item when you spend $100.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by BEST EZ GIFT. Flowing manes blend into crashing waves on these deep bronze-finished bookends that are perfect for the horse lover. Pair
Books NOT included
Average customer rating:
- Inexpensive NMEA Logger
- nothing special
- Very inaccurate, as are all other non-SIRFstarIII devices
- Fun gadget
- Cool idea - but
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Sony GPS-CS1 GPS Device for CyberShot Digital Cameras
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Photography
Binding: Electronics
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Product Features:
- Keep track of where and when your digital photos were taken with satellite precision
- No need for complex set-up or connection; just turn on the GPS unit and check its positioning status
- Holds approximately 360 hours (31MB) of data, equivalent to one month of tracking recorded at 15 second intervals
- Up to 10 hours of use with alkaline batteries or 14 hours with Ni-MH batteries
- Compatible with Cybershot DSC-S500, S600, S45, W30, W50, W70, W100, H2, H5, T30 and Sony Alpha DSLR-A100
ASIN: B000HDIYEO
Release Date: 2006-09-15
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Product Description
Keep track of your photo locations and dates easily with satellite precision. The GPS-CS1 calculates and records position data. When used with the supplied GPS Image Tracker software, the GPS-CS1 allows you to match the time and location data in the device with your photos. By using the Picture Motion Browser software, supplied with certain Sony cameras, your photos will be shown on an online map, giving you a whole new way to organize, manage and enjoy your pictures. The GPS Unit records a location log every 15 seconds. When a photo is taken between two log points, the supplied GPS Image Tracker software estimates the locations by extrapolating from logs recorded before and after photos are taken. The software creates an estimated location between the two recorded locations. Also, if the user takes a photo when there is no satellite signal available, such as when going underground or indoors, the software makes its estimation in the same way. Compact and lightweight, weighing only about 55g not including batteries Frequency Response - 1575.42 MHz (L1 Band, C/A code) 31MB User Memory Capacity Supported Formats - Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, Millennium Edition, XP Home Edition, XP Professional
Customer Reviews:
Inexpensive NMEA Logger.......2007-12-27
Writes standard GPS NMEA logs in plain text format, very easy to parse. The device will open as a USB drive. I have the Cybershot version, which does work with other brand digital cameras. Not all of the software will install if you don't have Sony's image software that comes with their cameras; however, "GPS Image Tracker" will. This will alter your photos EXIF tags so that they will automatically be placed on a map when uploaded to photo sites like Flickr. The software works by comparing the GPS time stamps with the ones in your photos, so remember to check your clock on the Camera!
nothing special.......2007-09-28
As with any Sony product I'm not impressed, doesn't work with mac, the software is too basic and quirky
OVER PRICED
Very inaccurate, as are all other non-SIRFstarIII devices.......2007-06-25
The Sony GPS-CS1 is a special-purpose GPS device that records a track log with position and time so you can geotag photos. There's no screen or output of any kind except for a few status lights, so you can't use the GPS-CS1 to tell where you are. I bought mine from Amazon for $93. (I got the GPSCS1KA package; there's also a similar package that costs $10 more and might have extra software for Sony cameras.)
You use the GPS-CS1 just like you use any GPS device to geotag photos: You turn the device on and leave it on while you shoot. Then you feed the GPS track log (which the GPS-CS1 and most other devices make available as a text file) and the photos into a tagging program which takes the time of each photo, finds that time in the track log, interpolates to calculate the position (lattitude, logitude, and elevation), and stores it as metadata in the photo itself. Once a photo is tagged, lots of applications and web sites can do various things with it, such as showing it on a map.
Most people are probably familiar with GPS devices these days as car navigation systems, but that kind of navigation isn't really a GPS technology. The GPS part of the device just determines its position. Another computer in the device shows it on a stored map and tells you when and where to turn based on a calculated route. Fancy navigation features are great to have, but they have nothing at all to do with geotagging photos. For that you just need the track log.
So, in theory, the Sony GPS-CS1 can do the job. In reality, it can't. Neither can another inexpensive GPS device I tried, a Magellan eXplorist 210 ($142).
Yesterday I drove about 15 miles on roads with no tree cover, no tall buildings, and no nearby mountains. I put the Sony GPS-CS1 and the Magellan eXplorist 210 on the dashboard of my car, and a Garmin 60CSx ($357) on the center console, where it had a much less clear view of the sky. Then I took the three track logs and displayed them in Google Earth (an application for the Mac and other platforms, not the web site).
The results showed that the Garmin track followed the road, even the lane, exactly, and the other two were way off. The Magellan has me between the lanes, and the Sony has me in on the wrong side.
The Magellan isn't necessarily better than the Sony. A bit later in the trip, the Sony was closer to the Garmin, and on the road, while the Magellan was way off.
Looking at the whole route, the Garmin was always on the road, and the other two were mostly in the wrong place. By "wrong place," I mean that the error was much greater than what the GPS system is capable of. If you want to tag your photos within one or two hundred feet of the actual position, then fine, but for lots of applications that's just too far off. Bear in mind that my conditions were nearly ideal. In a more urban setting the two cheaper devices would probably be even more wrong.
It's not that the Sony and the Magellan were always wrong. But such instruments need to be judged based on their reliability, and that's determined by when they're wrong, not when they're right. The Garmin was never wrong, not on my trip yesterday, nor on any other outing I've taken it on since I got it a few weeks ago.
It's not that Garmin knows something that Sony and Magellan don't. It's that the Garmin 60CSx has a SIRFstarIII GPS chip and the other two don't. I didn't run the test, but if I compared a $300+ SIRFstarIII-chip-based Magellan to a $150 Garmin without the chip, the results would show the higher-priced device to be right and the cheaper one to be wrong. Alas, the only attraction of the Sony is its low price, and that's just not enough to pay for electronics that actually work.
The Sony GPS-CS1 has a few other problems:
1. It won't connect to a PowerPC-based Mac (even with OS X 10.4.10; I didn't try the as-yet-unreleased 10.5), although it works fine on an Intel-based Mac or on a Windows Vista PC. (I understand it also works fine on XP and Linux.) I have a lot of experience connecting USB drives to my Mac, and my guess is that it's not hard to make one that connects. Clearly, Sony just doesn't care. (Some reviewers blame the problem on Apple, but the PowerPC-based Macs have been around for years with no problems connecting to everyone else's USB devices.)
2. Because the Sony has no display, you can't confirm that it's tracking. On devices with a screen, you can view the track to confirm that you've got it set up right. All you have on the Sony is a blinking light that tells you it's locked onto GPS satellites.
So, my advice for buying a GPS device for geotagging is to get a device with SIRFstarIII chip. Lots of photographers spend $2000 or more on their body and lenses, so why not $350 for the GPS? As as bonus, it will tell you how to get to the shoot and how to get home afterwards. If an accuracy of a few hundred feet is all you need and you don't use a PowerPC-based Mac, then the Sony GPS-CS1 is OK, and it does cost only $93.
Fun gadget.......2007-05-23
My experiences with this unit fall right in line with those written by other reviewers both positive and negative. On the plus side its a well designed and built gadget. Easy to use and fun to trace your travels (after the fact). Its bigger than what the photos made it seem like but not so bulky as to be a pain to use.
On the negative side it chews up batteries pretty quickly, especially if it is searching for satellite signals. I use NiMH rechargeables otherwise id be tossing alkalines away like tissue.
The location data is pretty accurate but you will get errors greater than the specs state. Mainly because there is such a long lapse (15 sec.) between the sample data. So the software has to make guesses for pictures that may have been taken between the sample points. By and large it is more than accurate enough for the stated purpose.
Cool idea - but.......2007-05-12
This is a cool idea, but there are a few problems. It only works with JPEGs as far as I can tell, which may not be a problem for some, but I shoot RAW files. The battery doesn't even last a whole day. It loses the signal at times. Although fairly straight forward, linking the images is an extra step. Many photo viewer programs will not report the GPS settings in the properties pane. Last, I had trouble seeing where the GPS points were on a map.
Product Description
Fujifilm is one of the leading providers of imaging and information products. Fujifilm and its employees are committed to providing consumers and professionals with the most innovative and highest-quality imaging and information products and services. The company's technological breakthroughs have played a major role in working towards achieving this goal.
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