Originally Posted by
inkista
I think whether an EyeFi is worth it depends on how you plan to use it. I got one for my father, because he NEVER and I mean NEVER bothers to download images from his P&S camera to his computer. He just lost his camera and with it a few hundred images. I have now got him set up with an EyeFi card, so that his JPEGs are automatically downloaded to his computer. If he loses his camera again, at least he will still have his photos. Worth every penny, since I always get stuck being his IT support.
I bought an EyeFi for myself out of curiosity, but found that, as Manfred says, it's no substitute for a card reader or shooting tethered. It is, however, useful if I feel I need to upload an image to a social networking site. I have no smartphone. I do have an iPodTouch. I've set my EyeFi card quite differently from my father's. I have mine to only transfer selected JPEGs from my G3 to the iPodTouch. The G3 is set to shoot smaller JPEGs + RAW. I use the "lock" option on images to select them, and they show up on the iOS film roll after transferring over on an ad-hoc wifi network. Since I'm only moving a handful of smaller images, the speed is pretty decent.
Why do you need to move images to the iPad? Do you need the full resolution? Do you need all images? Do you need the RAW? What are you doing with the images on the iPad? An iPad isn't a desktop box. If you're just showing SOOC images ASAP to a client, then maybe shooting JPEG+RAW, transferring only selected JPEGs at a lower-than-full resolution (but as high or higher than the iPad's resolution) might be the way to go.