Are portable hard drives considered taboo?
Code Blue
Registered Users Posts: 29 Big grins
I was talking with a friend who's also heavily into photography, and the discussion moved to the fact that I was organizing my photos because I bought a 320gb hard drive and was putting every single photograph I had from all computers into one location.
he warned me against using portable HD's and said they were unreliable, and all my pictures would be at risk yadda yadda. Is he just under the wrong impression or do people really not use them to store their pictures on?
I primarily use my dell xps 12" laptop.. the hard drive thats on it isn't huge so I find the portable one convenient.
I'd love to hear your thoughts/comments/advice !!
he warned me against using portable HD's and said they were unreliable, and all my pictures would be at risk yadda yadda. Is he just under the wrong impression or do people really not use them to store their pictures on?
I primarily use my dell xps 12" laptop.. the hard drive thats on it isn't huge so I find the portable one convenient.
I'd love to hear your thoughts/comments/advice !!
My Equipment:
Canon 20d + Grip / Canon 580 EX / Canon 17-40L / Canon 24-105L / Canon 70-200 f2.8 ISL / Mannfrotto 055MF3 Tripod w/329RC4 Head.
Hoping to get back into the art and improve my skills whenever needed.
Canon 20d + Grip / Canon 580 EX / Canon 17-40L / Canon 24-105L / Canon 70-200 f2.8 ISL / Mannfrotto 055MF3 Tripod w/329RC4 Head.
Hoping to get back into the art and improve my skills whenever needed.
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Comments
I don't think portable hard drives are any less reliable as long as you aren't moving them around. Moving them increases the risk of banging or dropping them. Nevertheless, the key to a reliable backup strategy is to always have two copies of everything on separate media. The easiest way to do that is by having two external drives that you keep synchronized. My personal (cheapskate) solution uses a combination of one external drive and DVDs. I do daily system backups to the external drive and also have a separate archive folder on it. I wait till I have one DVD's worth of pics on my laptop, then burn a DVD, copy the pics to the external folder and then delete the files on the laptop.
yea I do realize the whole back it up solution. I plan to utilize that in the near future, I am wading through tons of unsorted pictures from 3 different computers... (about 2 gigs worth of lol cats doesn't help either !!!)
Canon 20d + Grip / Canon 580 EX / Canon 17-40L / Canon 24-105L / Canon 70-200 f2.8 ISL / Mannfrotto 055MF3 Tripod w/329RC4 Head.
Hoping to get back into the art and improve my skills whenever needed.
But all electronic equipment will fail. If you really don't want to lose an image or data, many use a HD (ext or in a computer) and a DVD copy.
I think that should be enough for most users IMO.
Actually all media will fail or become corrupt at some point in time and it is up to each individual to decide which type of media they use for archiving.....I have well over 200 cd/dvd's that are corrupt and the hdd's these were on died a very horrible death (the head of the hdd actually slammed into it and dug a nice gouge thru it) so i am out this set of archives....some of truly one of a kind wildlife photos and also clients weddings and portraits......even tho I would trust archiving to Mam-A(mitsui) Gold media....it wouod now be so cost prohibitive to start over with disk type media that I just keep buying Seagate FreeAgent Pro externals (for under $90+s/h off ebay brand new) that this is not only less expensive but also much easier to archive this way......getiing to a point of 3 copies of everything (including "c" drive and my "C" was the first to be made into 3 archives using Acronos Easy Migrate....as for my photo archiving..... i use the Scott Kelby mtheod od storing my Photos (mentioned in his LR2 book for Digital Photogs) only 2-3 folders per drive and all photos are numbered in sequence and keyworded heavily for finding....each week I archive off my working drive (working drive for me is where I first upload off my CF cards....) and also my actuall finished drive is also archived each week.....to do this I simply note which is the last file uploaded and then copy all files from that point on into the archive.....this has worked perfectly for me so far....I do have subfolders for cleints files those are by date and name of client.........has kept my drives looking much cleaner than before....
I also have a set of drives dedicated to music, software and movies....these get a double archive.......except forthe software and it like my phots drives is a 3 deep system.....Music and movies I can replace pretty easily.........
Really important final images and paying stuff goes onto a remote server like SmugMug as well.
You can never really be too careful. I've seen it all happen.
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
sound advice.
if you're looking for an in the field backup device, i suggest getting a sanho colorspace o and outfitting it with a ssd hd (solid state hard drive). it is quite possibly, the fastest, most reliable portable backup device combo that's currently available. you'll have to install the ssd yourself as sanho does not include them. eliminating moving parts helps to lessen the likelihood of an early hd death caused by physical shock. i have a colorspace o but with a standard sata hd. i try to be careful with it...
- my photography: www.dangin.com
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Art Scott and I often think alike. I use three external hard drives.
I will download my images to my computer using a card reader and cull the bad ones. I then immediately copy these images to hard drive #1 and then to hard drive #2.
I do all my editing and playing around with the images stored on hard drive #1 and never touch my images on hard drive #2. They are my "digital negatives".
I will finally copy the completed and post processed images to a third hard drive. Hard drives are really inexpensive. I have a 500 GB and two 320 GB drives which gives me plenty of storage space. (Storage space is relative, when I got my first computer with 120 MB of hard drive, I thought that I would never fill it up)
One of the 320 GB drives is small enough (a bit larger than a pack of king size cigarettes) to take traveling along with my notebook computer. When traveling, I will download my CF card to my notebook and then cull and copy the files to the physically small 320 GB drive. I will not post process when traveling and usually leave my images on the notebook until I get home and copy to hard drive #2.
By the way, Scott Kelby's books are great and he gives an in-depth look at different techniques to manage workflow. I especially like his book, The Adobe Photoshop CS3 Book for Digital Photographers.
http://www.amazon.com/Photoshop-Digital-Photographers-Voices-Matter/dp/0321501918/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1227040068&sr=8-1
I am also a bit of a klutz so I need any extra protection that I can find. I've dropped these a few times (more than I care to admit:cry ) while they've been on but they have never failed me!
Cheers,
Dave
www.dlphotography.ca
www.redbubble.com/people/dlibrach
It plugs into a USB 2 port and cost about $130. It will do an automatic backup of 'my documents' at 10 pm every night, or not, if you don't want it to.
The I/o speeds are just like the regular HD, and it has the advantage of being usable on any computer by loading software that is in the HD itself. The extra storage is fantastic, and having backups of one's most important files is very useful (and important if the main HD goes down.)
One can get up to 1 TB external HDs for around $250.
[1 TB = 1000 MB].
Hope this is useful.
Once I submit the client portfolio (i.e. the job is complete), I backup to the external drive, backup onto my Smuggy account, and make room on my local machine by deleting the porfolio off my working computer drive. This way I always have a local copy on my external drive and a bomb-proof copy on Smuggy.
I do this practice for my personal piccies also.
- Mike
IR Modified Sony F717
http://2H2OPhoto.smugmug.com