Panasonic phone Apps (click bait title edited)

... With phone apps. Notably Lumix Image App and Lumix Sync.

My daughter likes the GM1 I gave her but man, to transfer her pics to her phone, the way Panasonic intended it. Absolute garbage. I remember toying with it many years ago on my own. But setting it up again, for her, absolute nightmare. Slow, full of errors and failures. After a quick web search, I can see my experience is not unique at all.

I can force the phone to connect but then the app doesn't think it's connected and tries to connect again... Leading to failure, obviously.

Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).

From early Lumix S9 impressions, it looks like got it's act together on the software/app front.
The mere idea of wanting to transfer image files from a GM1 via wifi sounds absurd to me.

The GM1 was made 11 years ago. How many new routers have you bought since, how many phones, and why did you replace them? How did your phone look like 11 years ago? Has it ever occurred to you, that the GM1 is the smallest digital ILC camera ever made, and it is a marvel of technology that they even managed to squeeze a basic wifi in there too, and despite it being an all metal camera without an external wifi antenna stick?

GM1 wifi was intended to remote control the camera with a phone over a few meters distance. And as a mere side effect of this, to transfer the occasional jpg picture to the phone or to a printer in a pinch. To transfer several jpg images or the much larger raw files, you have to use the special USB cable that came with the camera. It is much faster and more reliable. Or you can use an SD card reader.
This is nonsense. The WiFi connectivity was one of the reasons I loved my GM1 and dragged it all over the world. In my recollection it worked fine if you connected directly to it. It's a bummer to hear the app support may not be the best anymore, but that's another matter.
Likely this is because back then, your expectations wrt wifi speed and connectivity were much lower.
No, it's probably because I was shooting JPEG and usually only transferring and handful of files at a time.
Yes a handful jpegs is reasonably fast. I guess 5 to 10 seconds or so for a jpeg.
Today nobody wants to disconnect his phone from wifi internet just to establish a direct connection to a camera, and then back....
I do this all the time - it's really not a big deal. It's the foundation of my concert workflow, since I shoot, pick my favorites, transfer to my phone for quick edits in SnapSeed and send to the marketing team for the club I work for who post literally while the show is still going on. 🤷‍♂️
And to connect a camera to a wifi network, you need some safety in place else everybody on the network can see or delete your pictures - the GM1 does not have any such safety built in, and even if had it would be obsolete as the last GM1 firmware update was 10 years ago. It would be pretty much as safe as running a laptop with a windows 7 version and no updates ever
I only ever connect directly to my cameras, so this is a total non-issue.
It is a big issue for "content creators". But it is not easy to solve.

There are already a few m43 cameras that can do this, Youngnuo has a range of Android m43 cameras, and there is the Alice camera. However they all suffer from a delay after power-on to first load their operating system. The thing is, they receive constant safety and OS updates, just like a phone or tablet or laptop. This is why they can connect to a wifi network safely and with ease. Whereas our conventional cameras only receive sporadic firmware updates when new, and none after a few years old. Making them too risky to allow a shared connection to a wifi network. That is why they can connect point-to-point only.

But I am sure many photographers would love the possibility to transfer their images to the cloud directly from the camera (and even whilst taking more pictures). You would love it too. Right now you have to make a point-to-point connection camera-to-phone. Whilst that is active, your wifi connection from the phone to the internet must be disconnected. Only after you break the camera connection can the phone reconnect to the internet and you can transfer the pics to the cloud (or to your employer or client waiting for the pics to do the post processing).
When I'm operating like this, I'm not on WiFi. I'm on a 5G connection at a venue, so there's nothing to disconnect from. I've been doing this for years. 🤷‍♂️
 
Sadly The Lumix Sync app is not compatible with my GX9.

I have just returned from a cycle ride. The photos (from my phone) are already posted, some during the ride. This sort of stuff needs to be posted quickly and easily - the existing Lumix Image app is mostly too much work.

Relative to my GX9, the S9 certainly has some failings (shutter, EVF). On the other hand now that I have to wear glasses all the time and not just for reading, the lack of an EVF is not fatal. It is small enough to be carried, possibly even with the GX9 as well. I don't really need a new camera, but GAS ...

Mark
 
......... for Clickbait titles :-P

OK, no you`re not , that would be Tony Northrop but fair play, you came close here - :-)

--
** Please ignore the Typos, I'm the world's worst Typist **
 
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[...] Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).
Interesting.

I only know the apps for Panasonic Lumix, Olympus/OM Systems, and Nikon (Snapbridge).

Connecting the WiFi to the camera for the first time is a hassle with all of them.

In my opinion Nikon Snapbridge wins hands down on the worst user experience in an Android app I've ever encountered.

OI share is fairly usable. Downloading, editing, and sharing all in one app.

I cannot comment much on Panasonic Lumix because I gave my GM1 to my nephew.
 
Fuji.

Relatively hassle free

You start the app but you have to go deep in the settings to get the camera going too. No pairing otherwise.

Once connected, it works. But file transfer is super slow. But that could be because my camera (XA3) is just slow. It's even slow at taking pictures (something DPReview also complains about in their review). I don't own any other Fuji camera so maybe file transfers are faster with newer, more powerful models. If that assumption is right then I'd rate it better than the Olympus/OMDS app.
Does this include auto transfer? That's what I'm most interested in right now.
 
Fuji.

Relatively hassle free

You start the app but you have to go deep in the settings to get the camera going too. No pairing otherwise.

Once connected, it works. But file transfer is super slow. But that could be because my camera (XA3) is just slow. It's even slow at taking pictures (something DPReview also complains about in their review). I don't own any other Fuji camera so maybe file transfers are faster with newer, more powerful models. If that assumption is right then I'd rate it better than the Olympus/OMDS app.
Does this include auto transfer? That's what I'm most interested in right now.
Yes, auto-transfer too. But keep in mind I'm using an older Fuji camera, with only WIFI (no bluetooth), and compatible with an older app (Fujifilm Camera Remote).

Newer Fujis use another app called Fujifilm Xapp. I never could connect to that one and my XA3 is not officially supported anyway. In Fujiworld, it seems there are two eras, everything before 26MP and everything after. My XA3 is 24MP so you get the drift.

This is maybe something more seasoned Fuji users could tell you. If only there was a subforum on this site where such users congregate... :)
 
Hmm, been a while since I turned on my GM1, but I pretty much never have issues with this on my GX850. It transfers pretty fast too compared to what I remember with my Oly bodies... My Sony has an advantage in that it can get woken up by Bluetooth so I can then initiate a transfer, but it's finickier and the app is terrible compared to Pana's.

You can't force the phone to connect to the camera tho, several different manufacturers' apps seem to hate this for whatever reason and it kinda screws up the setup until it's done from scratch, at least on Android. I've also noticed that my Pixels hate staying connected to the cameras when I'm near my home WiFi, since they can't detect an Internet connection, I'm willing to bet that leads to many people's issues.

Some bodies let you connect to a router and transfer over the network, which would circumvent that, but since I mostly use it on the go I've never bothered.
 
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... With phone apps. Notably Lumix Image App and Lumix Sync.

My daughter likes the GM1 I gave her but man, to transfer her pics to her phone, the way Panasonic intended it. Absolute garbage. I remember toying with it many years ago on my own. But setting it up again, for her, absolute nightmare. Slow, full of errors and failures. After a quick web search, I can see my experience is not unique at all.

I can force the phone to connect but then the app doesn't think it's connected and tries to connect again... Leading to failure, obviously.

Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).

From early Lumix S9 impressions, it looks like got it's act together on the software/app front.
I don't recall if the GM1 does this, but my observation working with both Olympus and Lumix bodies/apps is that often times the problematic piece is with the Bluetooth handshake that occurs, ostensibly, to make it easier to establish a WiFi connection (which is needed to transfer files). So you can try to work around this by "manually" enabling WiFi on the camera, and then"manually" connecting to the camera through the smartphones system settings and only then launching the App. I find this generally works better, more often.

Thankfully this is an area where the latest cameras seem to do a bit better.
 
... With phone apps. Notably Lumix Image App and Lumix Sync.

My daughter likes the GM1 I gave her but man, to transfer her pics to her phone, the way Panasonic intended it. Absolute garbage. I remember toying with it many years ago on my own. But setting it up again, for her, absolute nightmare. Slow, full of errors and failures. After a quick web search, I can see my experience is not unique at all.

I can force the phone to connect but then the app doesn't think it's connected and tries to connect again... Leading to failure, obviously.

Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).

From early Lumix S9 impressions, it looks like got it's act together on the software/app front.
The mere idea of wanting to transfer image files from a GM1 via wifi sounds absurd to me.

The GM1 was made 11 years ago. How many new routers have you bought since, how many phones, and why did you replace them? How did your phone look like 11 years ago? Has it ever occurred to you, that the GM1 is the smallest digital ILC camera ever made, and it is a marvel of technology that they even managed to squeeze a basic wifi in there too, and despite it being an all metal camera without an external wifi antenna stick?

GM1 wifi was intended to remote control the camera with a phone over a few meters distance. And as a mere side effect of this, to transfer the occasional jpg picture to the phone or to a printer in a pinch. To transfer several jpg images or the much larger raw files, you have to use the special USB cable that came with the camera. It is much faster and more reliable. Or you can use an SD card reader.
Doesn't seem that preposterous to me, and I don't think anyone said anything about RAW. I've not used it with my Pixel 8 but I did transfer images from it to a 3 and a 5 without issue.

My Wi-Fi router is 8 years old and still working like a champ btw, I just updated my fiber from 1Gbps up/down to 2.5Gbps (for free) and that's the only reason I'm now considering changing it. I've had two of them (one in bridge mode) working in a concrete house for a good while. I've had 5 phones in that 11 year (Nexus 5, Pixel 1/3/5/8) period but idk what that has to do with anything.

I don't think sticking Wifi into the GM1 was any kinda breakthrough, I'd had Pana ILCs and P&S with WiFi for years before the GM1. My older GF6 transferred images just fine as well. You seem a little sensitive about the GM1.
 
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... With phone apps. Notably Lumix Image App and Lumix Sync.

My daughter likes the GM1 I gave her but man, to transfer her pics to her phone, the way Panasonic intended it. Absolute garbage. I remember toying with it many years ago on my own. But setting it up again, for her, absolute nightmare. Slow, full of errors and failures. After a quick web search, I can see my experience is not unique at all.

I can force the phone to connect but then the app doesn't think it's connected and tries to connect again... Leading to failure, obviously.

Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).

From early Lumix S9 impressions, it looks like got it's act together on the software/app front.
The mere idea of wanting to transfer image files from a GM1 via wifi sounds absurd to me.

The GM1 was made 11 years ago. How many new routers have you bought since, how many phones, and why did you replace them? How did your phone look like 11 years ago? Has it ever occurred to you, that the GM1 is the smallest digital ILC camera ever made, and it is a marvel of technology that they even managed to squeeze a basic wifi in there too, and despite it being an all metal camera without an external wifi antenna stick?

GM1 wifi was intended to remote control the camera with a phone over a few meters distance. And as a mere side effect of this, to transfer the occasional jpg picture to the phone or to a printer in a pinch. To transfer several jpg images or the much larger raw files, you have to use the special USB cable that came with the camera. It is much faster and more reliable. Or you can use an SD card reader.
This is nonsense. The WiFi connectivity was one of the reasons I loved my GM1 and dragged it all over the world. In my recollection it worked fine if you connected directly to it. It's a bummer to hear the app support may not be the best anymore, but that's another matter.
Likely this is because back then, your expectations wrt wifi speed and connectivity were much lower. Today nobody wants to disconnect his phone from wifi internet just to establish a direct connection to a camera, and then back....
Um, really? That's how most modern cameras still expect you to do it. A few will allow you to do it over a network, but most don't.
And to connect a camera to a wifi network, you need some safety in place else everybody on the network can see or delete your pictures - the GM1 does not have any such safety built in, and even if had it would be obsolete as the last GM1 firmware update was 10 years ago. It would be pretty much as safe as running a laptop with a windows 7 version and no updates ever.
AFAIK there's no way to easily delete photos from the GM1 over the network unless you've reverse engineered the app or the communication protocol, so I dunno what you're going on about...
 
... With phone apps. Notably Lumix Image App and Lumix Sync.

My daughter likes the GM1 I gave her but man, to transfer her pics to her phone, the way Panasonic intended it. Absolute garbage. I remember toying with it many years ago on my own. But setting it up again, for her, absolute nightmare. Slow, full of errors and failures. After a quick web search, I can see my experience is not unique at all.

I can force the phone to connect but then the app doesn't think it's connected and tries to connect again... Leading to failure, obviously.

Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).

From early Lumix S9 impressions, it looks like got it's act together on the software/app front.
The mere idea of wanting to transfer image files from a GM1 via wifi sounds absurd to me.

The GM1 was made 11 years ago. How many new routers have you bought since, how many phones, and why did you replace them? How did your phone look like 11 years ago? Has it ever occurred to you, that the GM1 is the smallest digital ILC camera ever made, and it is a marvel of technology that they even managed to squeeze a basic wifi in there too, and despite it being an all metal camera without an external wifi antenna stick?

GM1 wifi was intended to remote control the camera with a phone over a few meters distance. And as a mere side effect of this, to transfer the occasional jpg picture to the phone or to a printer in a pinch. To transfer several jpg images or the much larger raw files, you have to use the special USB cable that came with the camera. It is much faster and more reliable. Or you can use an SD card reader.
This is nonsense. The WiFi connectivity was one of the reasons I loved my GM1 and dragged it all over the world. In my recollection it worked fine if you connected directly to it. It's a bummer to hear the app support may not be the best anymore, but that's another matter.
Likely this is because back then, your expectations wrt wifi speed and connectivity were much lower.
No, it's probably because I was shooting JPEG and usually only transferring and handful of files at a time.
Today nobody wants to disconnect his phone from wifi internet just to establish a direct connection to a camera, and then back....
I do this all the time - it's really not a big deal. It's the foundation of my concert workflow, since I shoot, pick my favorites, transfer to my phone for quick edits in SnapSeed and send to the marketing team for the club I work for who post literally while the show is still going on. 🤷‍♂️
And to connect a camera to a wifi network, you need some safety in place else everybody on the network can see or delete your pictures - the GM1 does not have any such safety built in, and even if had it would be obsolete as the last GM1 firmware update was 10 years ago. It would be pretty much as safe as running a laptop with a windows 7 version and no updates ever
I only ever connect directly to my cameras, so this is a total non-issue.
 
... With phone apps. Notably Lumix Image App and Lumix Sync.

My daughter likes the GM1 I gave her but man, to transfer her pics to her phone, the way Panasonic intended it. Absolute garbage. I remember toying with it many years ago on my own. But setting it up again, for her, absolute nightmare. Slow, full of errors and failures. After a quick web search, I can see my experience is not unique at all.

I can force the phone to connect but then the app doesn't think it's connected and tries to connect again... Leading to failure, obviously.

Panasonic is not alone in this and all apps from camera manufacturers that I have tried so far have been from bad to worst (Nikon Snapbridge is the least bad).

From early Lumix S9 impressions, it looks like got it's act together on the software/app front.
The mere idea of wanting to transfer image files from a GM1 via wifi sounds absurd to me.

The GM1 was made 11 years ago. How many new routers have you bought since, how many phones, and why did you replace them? How did your phone look like 11 years ago? Has it ever occurred to you, that the GM1 is the smallest digital ILC camera ever made, and it is a marvel of technology that they even managed to squeeze a basic wifi in there too, and despite it being an all metal camera without an external wifi antenna stick?

GM1 wifi was intended to remote control the camera with a phone over a few meters distance. And as a mere side effect of this, to transfer the occasional jpg picture to the phone or to a printer in a pinch. To transfer several jpg images or the much larger raw files, you have to use the special USB cable that came with the camera. It is much faster and more reliable. Or you can use an SD card reader.
This is nonsense. The WiFi connectivity was one of the reasons I loved my GM1 and dragged it all over the world. In my recollection it worked fine if you connected directly to it. It's a bummer to hear the app support may not be the best anymore, but that's another matter.
Likely this is because back then, your expectations wrt wifi speed and connectivity were much lower.
No, it's probably because I was shooting JPEG and usually only transferring and handful of files at a time.
Yes a handful jpegs is reasonably fast. I guess 5 to 10 seconds or so for a jpeg.
Today nobody wants to disconnect his phone from wifi internet just to establish a direct connection to a camera, and then back....
I do this all the time - it's really not a big deal. It's the foundation of my concert workflow, since I shoot, pick my favorites, transfer to my phone for quick edits in SnapSeed and send to the marketing team for the club I work for who post literally while the show is still going on. 🤷‍♂️
And to connect a camera to a wifi network, you need some safety in place else everybody on the network can see or delete your pictures - the GM1 does not have any such safety built in, and even if had it would be obsolete as the last GM1 firmware update was 10 years ago. It would be pretty much as safe as running a laptop with a windows 7 version and no updates ever
I only ever connect directly to my cameras, so this is a total non-issue.
It is a big issue for "content creators". But it is not easy to solve.

There are already a few m43 cameras that can do this, Youngnuo has a range of Android m43 cameras, and there is the Alice camera. However they all suffer from a delay after power-on to first load their operating system. The thing is, they receive constant safety and OS updates, just like a phone or tablet or laptop. This is why they can connect to a wifi network safely and with ease. Whereas our conventional cameras only receive sporadic firmware updates when new, and none after a few years old. Making them too risky to allow a shared connection to a wifi network. That is why they can connect point-to-point only.

But I am sure many photographers would love the possibility to transfer their images to the cloud directly from the camera (and even whilst taking more pictures). You would love it too. Right now you have to make a point-to-point connection camera-to-phone. Whilst that is active, your wifi connection from the phone to the internet must be disconnected. Only after you break the camera connection can the phone reconnect to the internet and you can transfer the pics to the cloud (or to your employer or client waiting for the pics to do the post processing).
That's not a big deal TBH, better than relying on the likes of Youngnuo for anything software related... I transfer images from my 61MP body just as well as from my 16MP bodies.
 
I have absolutely no problems transferring OM1 and E-M1 iii as well as Nikon 6 photos to my IPhone using the manufacturers’ software. In fact, it has surprised me how well it all works.
 
I disagree, although GM1 is a very old camera, works only with Image App, not Lumix Sync (officially not supported, might work).

Lumix Sync. Maybe, initial setup is cumbersome. Make sure Bluetooth and Location is enabled on your phone:

+

Wake up camera (bluetooth)

Sleep camera (bluetooth)

Automatic connection to wifi (first bluetooth to wake up then to wifi).

Priority to phone (menu) gives you access for C1 C2 C3-1to3.

You can connect through router to extend range 50 meters (2.4GHz).

You access ALL important cameras parameters.

Zyfon yt-500 remote control pan and tilt 433MHz can take up to G9+Sigma56mm f1.4 1000 grams (433 MHz doesn't interfere with 2.4 GHz wifi)

-

You access ALL important cameras parameters, except Mechanical/ Electronic Shutter (Custom C1,C2, C3 workaround).

They removed the ability to delete photos remotely (wi-fi).

Takes from 30 seconds to 50 seconds to connect 2.4GHz via travelrouter (start: wake up bluetooth using the phone, but all is automated).

I've read manuals on other brands, but Panasonic Lumix Sync is imho the best out there, in terms of options what you can do with your smartphone.

Now they added a LUT library :)
 
I disagree, although GM1 is a very old camera, works only with Image App, not Lumix Sync (officially not supported, might work).

Lumix Sync. Maybe, initial setup is cumbersome. Make sure Bluetooth and Location is enabled on your phone:

+

Wake up camera (bluetooth)

Sleep camera (bluetooth)

Automatic connection to wifi (first bluetooth to wake up then to wifi).

Priority to phone (menu) gives you access for C1 C2 C3-1to3.

You can connect through router to extend range 50 meters (2.4GHz).

You access ALL important cameras parameters.

Zyfon yt-500 remote control pan and tilt 433MHz can take up to G9+Sigma56mm f1.4 1000 grams (433 MHz doesn't interfere with 2.4 GHz wifi)

-

You access ALL important cameras parameters, except Mechanical/ Electronic Shutter (Custom C1,C2, C3 workaround).

They removed the ability to delete photos remotely (wi-fi).

Takes from 30 seconds to 50 seconds to connect 2.4GHz via travelrouter (start: wake up bluetooth using the phone, but all is automated).

I've read manuals on other brands, but Panasonic Lumix Sync is imho the best out there, in terms of options what you can do with your smartphone.

Now they added a LUT library :)
Honestly this is all way too cumbersome. Camera makes will have to skip all this if they want to remain relevant.
 
I disagree, although GM1 is a very old camera, works only with Image App, not Lumix Sync (officially not supported, might work).

Lumix Sync. Maybe, initial setup is cumbersome. Make sure Bluetooth and Location is enabled on your phone:

+

Wake up camera (bluetooth)

Sleep camera (bluetooth)

Automatic connection to wifi (first bluetooth to wake up then to wifi).

Priority to phone (menu) gives you access for C1 C2 C3-1to3.

You can connect through router to extend range 50 meters (2.4GHz).

You access ALL important cameras parameters.

Zyfon yt-500 remote control pan and tilt 433MHz can take up to G9+Sigma56mm f1.4 1000 grams (433 MHz doesn't interfere with 2.4 GHz wifi)

-

You access ALL important cameras parameters, except Mechanical/ Electronic Shutter (Custom C1,C2, C3 workaround).

They removed the ability to delete photos remotely (wi-fi).

Takes from 30 seconds to 50 seconds to connect 2.4GHz via travelrouter (start: wake up bluetooth using the phone, but all is automated).

I've read manuals on other brands, but Panasonic Lumix Sync is imho the best out there, in terms of options what you can do with your smartphone.

Now they added a LUT library :)
Honestly this is all way too cumbersome. Camera makes will have to skip all this if they want to remain relevant.
Even when these system works well, they don't work well enough to see mass adoption. I'm a geek, I develop mobile apps for a living and love the technical aspect of photography - but most people are not.

Unfortunately, "solving" this problem requires cooperation with Apple and Google to come up with a more formal protocol for transferring files between a camera and a phone. It will inevitably involve the same the same technologies - a combination of NFC/Bluetooth/WiFi - but with a much tighter integration between the phone Operating System and the camera's Operating System.

Ideally, it should be as easy as interfacing with any other Bluetooth device such as a speaker. After an initial pairing (initiated from the phone, not through a third party app), users can simply choose "Lumix G9" as a source when using photos anywhere in the operating system - directly from SnapSeed, Lightroom, uploading to DPReview forums, whatever. It should ultimately be as easy as choosing from the device's camera roll.

But it will never happen. It's not in Apple or Google's interest to make it easier to use a third party camera when there's already a sophisticated camera in their phone, which the vast majority of people are perfectly happy with. 🤷🏽‍♂️

So unfortunately you have to sort of pick your poison. Which system works the best for your workflow, the smartphone you have, etc. Between the S5 II and the OM-1 Mark II that I use for events the Lumix system currently has the lead - once photos are rated, I simply turn on WiFi and wait for my phone to connect (since I'm typically in situations where I haven't already joined a WiFi network), then the app usually picks up that the camera is there, I go to "Import Photos" filter for "3 star", make my selections and do the import. The only downsides to it are that the iPhone app doesn't remember your filter selections (the Android version does) and it doesn't distinguish between photos you've already imported, or not. I typically do multiple import per event, so OM System's resettable "Share Order" works a bit better in that regard.
 
I disagree, although GM1 is a very old camera, works only with Image App, not Lumix Sync (officially not supported, might work).

Lumix Sync. Maybe, initial setup is cumbersome. Make sure Bluetooth and Location is enabled on your phone:

+

Wake up camera (bluetooth)

Sleep camera (bluetooth)

Automatic connection to wifi (first bluetooth to wake up then to wifi).

Priority to phone (menu) gives you access for C1 C2 C3-1to3.

You can connect through router to extend range 50 meters (2.4GHz).

You access ALL important cameras parameters.

Zyfon yt-500 remote control pan and tilt 433MHz can take up to G9+Sigma56mm f1.4 1000 grams (433 MHz doesn't interfere with 2.4 GHz wifi)

-

You access ALL important cameras parameters, except Mechanical/ Electronic Shutter (Custom C1,C2, C3 workaround).

They removed the ability to delete photos remotely (wi-fi).

Takes from 30 seconds to 50 seconds to connect 2.4GHz via travelrouter (start: wake up bluetooth using the phone, but all is automated).

I've read manuals on other brands, but Panasonic Lumix Sync is imho the best out there, in terms of options what you can do with your smartphone.

Now they added a LUT library :)
Honestly this is all way too cumbersome. Camera makes will have to skip all this if they want to remain relevant.
Even when these system works well, they don't work well enough to see mass adoption. I'm a geek, I develop mobile apps for a living and love the technical aspect of photography - but most people are not.

Unfortunately, "solving" this problem requires cooperation with Apple and Google to come up with a more formal protocol for transferring files between a camera and a phone.
Camera makers are the problem, not the phones. Camera makers are too secretive and protective of their camera operating systems. Android is a fairly open and well documented operating system, whereas camera operating systems are the exact opposite of open and well documented - they are secretive and proprietary.

Example: why do cameras not have an inbuilt device webpage? You could access the whole camera menu system with your laptop, using its keyboard and monitor. Instead of fiddling with a few buttons and a minuscule backpanel display. You could have a one page overview of all camera settings, modify it quickly and comfortably to your needs, assign commands to buttons etc. You could run hardware tests. You could manage firmware updates. Etc etc etc. Including your connectivity setup. You could configure your camera exactly to your tastes and needs.
It will inevitably involve the same the same technologies - a combination of NFC/Bluetooth/WiFi - but with a much tighter integration between the phone Operating System and the camera's Operating System.

Ideally, it should be as easy as interfacing with any other Bluetooth device such as a speaker.
You see, wifi/BT speakers work well, because the makers of these spend the R&D money to make sure they work well with all sorts of phones out there. They realize that no phone makers is going to do this job for them.
After an initial pairing (initiated from the phone, not through a third party app), users can simply choose "Lumix G9" as a source when using photos anywhere in the operating system - directly from SnapSeed, Lightroom, uploading to DPReview forums, whatever. It should ultimately be as easy as choosing from the device's camera roll.

But it will never happen. It's not in Apple or Google's interest to make it easier to use a third party camera when there's already a sophisticated camera in their phone, which the vast majority of people are perfectly happy with. 🤷🏽‍♂️
Two billion phones are sold each year. Compared to 7 million cameras. That is 200 times more phones than cameras.

Why should the phone makers care? The onus is on the camera makers, they should care and make their cameras better compatible with phones and tablets and PC's.
So unfortunately you have to sort of pick your poison. Which system works the best for your workflow, the smartphone you have, etc. Between the S5 II and the OM-1 Mark II that I use for events the Lumix system currently has the lead - once photos are rated, I simply turn on WiFi and wait for my phone to connect (since I'm typically in situations where I haven't already joined a WiFi network), then the app usually picks up that the camera is there, I go to "Import Photos" filter for "3 star", make my selections and do the import. The only downsides to it are that the iPhone app doesn't remember your filter selections (the Android version does) and it doesn't distinguish between photos you've already imported, or not. I typically do multiple import per event, so OM System's resettable "Share Order" works a bit better in that regard.
 
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I disagree, although GM1 is a very old camera, works only with Image App, not Lumix Sync (officially not supported, might work).

Lumix Sync. Maybe, initial setup is cumbersome. Make sure Bluetooth and Location is enabled on your phone:

+

Wake up camera (bluetooth)

Sleep camera (bluetooth)

Automatic connection to wifi (first bluetooth to wake up then to wifi).

Priority to phone (menu) gives you access for C1 C2 C3-1to3.

You can connect through router to extend range 50 meters (2.4GHz).

You access ALL important cameras parameters.

Zyfon yt-500 remote control pan and tilt 433MHz can take up to G9+Sigma56mm f1.4 1000 grams (433 MHz doesn't interfere with 2.4 GHz wifi)

-

You access ALL important cameras parameters, except Mechanical/ Electronic Shutter (Custom C1,C2, C3 workaround).

They removed the ability to delete photos remotely (wi-fi).

Takes from 30 seconds to 50 seconds to connect 2.4GHz via travelrouter (start: wake up bluetooth using the phone, but all is automated).

I've read manuals on other brands, but Panasonic Lumix Sync is imho the best out there, in terms of options what you can do with your smartphone.

Now they added a LUT library :)
Honestly this is all way too cumbersome. Camera makes will have to skip all this if they want to remain relevant.
Even when these system works well, they don't work well enough to see mass adoption. I'm a geek, I develop mobile apps for a living and love the technical aspect of photography - but most people are not.

Unfortunately, "solving" this problem requires cooperation with Apple and Google to come up with a more formal protocol for transferring files between a camera and a phone.
Camera makers are the problem, not the phones. Camera makers are too secretive and protective of their camera operating systems. Android is a fairly open and well documented operating system, whereas camera operating systems are the exact opposite of open and well documented - they are secretive and proprietary.
Even tho I shared l disagreed with you earlier about the GM1, I kinda agree here... That guardedness has always bothered me.
Example: why do cameras not have an inbuilt device webpage? You could access the whole camera menu system with your laptop, using its keyboard and monitor. Instead of fiddling with a few buttons and a minuscule backpanel display. You could have a one page overview of all camera settings, modify it quickly and comfortably to your needs, assign commands to buttons etc. You could run hardware tests. You could manage firmware updates. Etc etc etc. Including your connectivity setup. You could configure your camera exactly to your tastes and needs.
Totally! I've suggested this a few times, making menus searchable from a phone would solve so many people's menu issues.
It will inevitably involve the same the same technologies - a combination of NFC/Bluetooth/WiFi - but with a much tighter integration between the phone Operating System and the camera's Operating System.

Ideally, it should be as easy as interfacing with any other Bluetooth device such as a speaker.
You see, wifi/BT speakers work well, because the makers of these spend the R&D money to make sure they work well with all sorts of phones out there. They realize that no phone makers is going to do this job for them.
It's also a simpler use case tho, the BT protocol already has a profile for music streaming, and it's not quite fast enough for image transfer...
After an initial pairing (initiated from the phone, not through a third party app), users can simply choose "Lumix G9" as a source when using photos anywhere in the operating system - directly from SnapSeed, Lightroom, uploading to DPReview forums, whatever. It should ultimately be as easy as choosing from the device's camera roll.

But it will never happen. It's not in Apple or Google's interest to make it easier to use a third party camera when there's already a sophisticated camera in their phone, which the vast majority of people are perfectly happy with. 🤷🏽‍♂️
Two billion phones are sold each year. Compared to 7 million cameras. That is 200 times more phones than cameras.

Why should the phone makers care? The onus is on the camera makers, they should care and make their cameras better compatible with phones and tablets and PC's.
We can only hope. Someone like Sony or Pana who make or have made mobile devices should be well poised for that, but they're not any better off than any other camera maker.
 
> it doesn't distinguish between photos you've already imported, or not.

This is annoying. What were they thinking when the apps were developed?

Most Phone OS really don't like connecting to a camera over wifi when there is a known internet connected wifi available. Though GoPro seem to have overcome this in their app.

Mark
 
It will inevitably involve the same the same technologies - a combination of NFC/Bluetooth/WiFi - but with a much tighter integration between the phone Operating System and the camera's Operating System.

Ideally, it should be as easy as interfacing with any other Bluetooth device such as a speaker.
You see, wifi/BT speakers work well, because the makers of these spend the R&D money to make sure they work well with all sorts of phones out there. They realize that no phone makers is going to do this job for them.
They work well because Bluetooth is a well-defined and implemented interface point. So the speaker manufacturer, for the most part, just needs to make sure they're adhering to that interface/API specification and by and large it should work with any device that also adheres to that specification.
After an initial pairing (initiated from the phone, not through a third party app), users can simply choose "Lumix G9" as a source when using photos anywhere in the operating system - directly from SnapSeed, Lightroom, uploading to DPReview forums, whatever. It should ultimately be as easy as choosing from the device's camera roll.

But it will never happen. It's not in Apple or Google's interest to make it easier to use a third party camera when there's already a sophisticated camera in their phone, which the vast majority of people are perfectly happy with. 🤷🏽‍♂️
Two billion phones are sold each year. Compared to 7 million cameras. That is 200 times more phones than cameras.

Why should the phone makers care? The onus is on the camera makers, they should care and make their cameras better compatible with phones and tablets and PC's.
The only thing that camera manufacturers can do right now is make sure their apps are as compatible as possible with the smartphones they're loaded onto, and then use the existing interfaces available to them (NFC, BT, WiFi) to cobble together a solution to get photos from the camera to the phone. But the point I'm making is that the fact that an app is needed at all is the problem. It points to the lack of a high-bandwidth photo sharing or camera connecting interface (API) to make this happen. Bluetooth alone is insufficient because it's bitrate is too low. WiFi has bandwidth, but it is too generic of an interface. A new interface is required to truly fix this problem - but that is something that both the smartphone manufacturer and the camera manufacturers would have to come to an agreement around, and then implement on both sides.
 

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