Nikon wireless adaptor and post-processing program...

Berzin

Senior Member
I have a Nikon d5200. Do I need this when I would like to include myself in a photo? Are all three included items necessary?

NikonWR-R10/WR-T10/WR-A10 Wireless Remote Adapter Set

2r2nnle.jpg


Also, I would like opinions on programs to organize photos and to do a little post-processing. Is Adobe Photoshop overkill? Does it have a high learning curve?

Thanks in advance.
 
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Do I need this when I would like to include myself in a photo? Are all three included items necessary?

2r2nnle.jpg


Also, would like opinions on programs to organize ophotos and to do a little post-processing. Is Adobe Photoshop overkill? Does it have a high learning curve?

Thanks in advance.

For organization and post processing Lightroom is the answer. Photoshop does not do any organization.

The ML-L3 is just a remote. All it does is fire the shutter.


You might want to check into the WU-1a Wireless Mobile Adapter from Nikon and see if it will do what you want. I know with my WiFi on my D7000, D7100, D750 and Coolpix S9900 I can use my iPhone to trigger the camera. If the setup is like a photo booth many people tether the camera to the computer and it will store the photos in Lightroom as you shoot. I have not done that but check it out via Google
 

zilla

Senior Member
Yes but it still allows communication between the phone and device.. Otherwise my phone is hunting all kinds of connections and interupts me a lot. Putting it on Airplane allows just the phone and WMU to talk.. Works for me..

And retired sparky here...
 
Doesn't that turn off all radio communication (cell service, wifi, bluetooth etc)?

It does but will allow the WMU to work correctly. I have one I used on my D7100 and it would never work any where near correctly until someone here suggested the Airplane mode. Once I found that the WMU works great on the D7100.

Just remember to turn the airplane mode off once you get through shooting so you can get a phone call.
 

barmalini

New member
You don't need any of these just to appear in a photo. Use a tripod and shutter release timer, it can be set to 10 seconds, so you can press the button and rush back to the spot in front of the lens.
 
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