I'm running digikam 3.5 on a Ubuntu 14.04 system. I have a Nikon
D3100. When I download images from the camera, the transfer rate is too slow to be useful; it only transfers about 1 image/minute! Any suggestions? _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
On Mon, 9 Jun 2014, Alan Barnett wrote: > I'm running digikam 3.5 on a Ubuntu 14.04 system. I have a Nikon D3100. > When I download images from the camera, the transfer rate is too slow to be > useful; it only transfers about 1 image/minute! > > Any suggestions? Hello Alan, I have a Nikon D3100 too, in my cameras, and I can confirm that downloading images via PTP is unuseable. (I may be lucky but, instead of a loading rate of 1 image/min. I get the amazing speed (!!!) of almost 2 images/min. :-) Doesn't seem to be a Digikam related problem. Digikam uses the libgphoto2 stuff, and gphoto2 supports many cameras, some of them are only partialy supported (or badly supported). And the Nikon D3100 is one ! If you wish to investigate a bit more, you should try the command line gphoto2 program. Connect your camera with the proper cable, and check first that your camera is properly recognized : gphoto2 --auto-detect This should show you something like : Nikon DSC D3100 (PTP mode) Check that images on your camera SD card are available : gphoto2 --list-files Then, do a transfert test : gphoto2 --get-all-files Works but it's awful (from downloading time point of view). And Digikam is innocent wrt that. > Any suggestions? My personal opinion is that you should consider abandonning that kind of connection. PTP transfert is an interesting feature in two cases : 1. User wants to monitor a camera from a computer, e.g. take a serie of pictures at regular intervals, e.g. gphoto2 --capture-image --interval 5 But this requires a properly supported camera. With a D3100 you get an error, Error (-1: 'Unspecified error'), (really interesting !!!) So, forget remote monitoring with not fully supported devices. 2. The photos device doesn't have a removeable memory card, and PTP is the only way to download images (concerns probably only some old, low cost, pocket cameras). With a standard camera using standard SD or SDHC cards, there's very few to expect from PTP downloading that will always be far more inefficient than an images copy via a USB SD card reader. Ok, you will waste 5 seconds of your time to remove the SD card out of the camera and plug it into a USB reader, but you will then copy hundreds of images in 20 to 30 seconds, depending on your computer and hard drives speed. Regards, Jean-François _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
On 06/10/2014 06:35 AM, Jean-François Rabasse wrote:
<stuff deleted> > > Check that images on your camera SD card are available : > gphoto2 --list-files > > Then, do a transfert test : > gphoto2 --get-all-files > > Works but it's awful (from downloading time point of view). > And Digikam is innocent wrt that. > files in about 15 minutes. After transfering 999 files, it reported a duplicate file name. I don't understand how this it's possible that there are two files on the camera with the same name. gphoto2 works fine. The problem is digikam's interface. _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Alan Barnett
I suspect the slowness comes from indexing with nepomuk. Try making sure the
directory is excluded within the nepomuk configuration, and turn nepomuk integratin off in digikam, if enabled. On Mandag den 9. juni 2014 16:49:34, Alan Barnett wrote: > I'm running digikam 3.5 on a Ubuntu 14.04 system. I have a Nikon > D3100. When I download images from the camera, the transfer rate is too > slow to be useful; it only transfers about 1 image/minute! > > Any suggestions? > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users -- Anders _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Alan Barnett
I have met this problem, caused by Ubuntu auto mounting the camera (as a storage device). I go into the file browser and eject the camera, after that dk can communicate normally with it.
On 9 June 2014 22:49:34 CEST, Alan Barnett <[hidden email]> wrote: I'm running digikam 3.5 on a Ubuntu 14.04 system. I have a Nikon -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
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