doctor_radium 23 minutes ago

I assume the average person buying the standard model could then just disable WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS if they so chose? So this really is for high security situations?

walrus01 25 minutes ago

I understand it's probably because the GPS functionality is integrated into the same RF chipset that's handling wifi/bluetooth, but it would be possible to make a "no transmit capability" camera that still has GPS metadata functionality, with GPS receiver chip and an antenna tuned for 1400-1600 MHz, since ordinary consumer grade GPS is a receive-only technology.

But that would still possibly present a problem for serious government use where it can't have an antenna of any form in it.

ChrisMarshallNY 21 minutes ago

> no Nikon SnapBridge

Unless they significantly improved that app, in the last eight years or so, it may not be a great loss.

  • Scene_Cast2 2 minutes ago

    Huh. When I rented a Z7 ii about 5 years ago, I found their Android app to be pretty great. (My next big camera is likely to be a Nikon, in part due to the nice app)

rationalist 43 minutes ago

It's a shame it costs more. I'm sure there are people who would like the non-wireless option, but would rather "save" $400.

HardwareLust 8 days ago

It's a Nikon Z6 III with WiFi and Bluetooth removed.

  • netsharc 20 minutes ago

    Somehow the article manages to repeat this obvious stuff about 7 or 8 times...

    I wonder if that hardware on the normal Z6 III is on a daughterboard, and if removing it makes the OS complain (like having no color ink mean some printer-scanner-combos won't scan).