Ideally, we'd like to do the job with a single cable, but this may not be practical. A good fallback is Apple's USB-C to (female) USB adapter (£19/$19), which can be combined with a second USB-A cable ('normal' USB, in other words): it's easy to find USB-A adapters for a huge variety of standards, including mini USB, micro USB and Lightning. Or you can go for a USB-C hub which lets you plug in almost anything. Note that the data transfer speed promised by USB-C may not be fulfilled if the standard on the other end of the cable (or on the second cable) is something slower - such as USB-A. USBĪ digital camera is likely to have a USB port of some kind: probably micro or mini. These are fairly easy to connect to your iPad with a single cable.Īmazon has a wide variety of USB cables available, although we recommend checking with the manufacturer (or in the product specs) that they are suitable for data transfer to the iPad Pro. Remember you're looking for a male-to-male cable, since a lot of the adapters that pop up in search have a male USB-C end and a female mini-USB end, and you'd need to plug a mini-USB cable into them as well. This adapter by UGREEN is the sort of thing you'd be looking for, although we haven't tried it ourselves. You may consider this cheating since it won't involve literally plugging the camera into the iPad, but in many cases, this is the easiest option.
#Nikon camera control pro 2 ipad how to#.