Man I feel stupid!
One of the HUGE annoyances with my new Canon 20D was that
1) it required a whole bunch of s/w to install
2) pictures were grouped in hundreds, presenting folders named canon101, canon 102, etc. (or something to that extent)
Which effectively rendered my usual copying technique useless.
I could just sort by date and copy the new stuff to a HDD. First I had to figure out which folder the new picture resides, then copy the rest of that folder, then go to each folder with a bigger number and copy their contents individually..
Suffice to say it was a hassle. Such a hassle that I decided temporarily take a break from S*E coding and create a little tool that would simply do this for me.
I even started it.
Luckily, I decided to take a break, have a martini and watch one of my favorite stand-up comedians show, recorded on my PVR. While doing this I also decided to look through the software manual which came with 20D.
Guess what... It turned out that is you switch the camera to the PTP mode (XP and above) - none of the problems exists! You don't have to install any custom s/w. You don't need to dig through endless 100-split folders. Combination of XP, USB and PTP (Picture Transfer Protocol) does its magic - you see a conventional drive and a plain list of pictures (well, you have to hit open or explore context menu first, otherwise it shows an empty drive - a bug I can live with).
It's still not as clean and totally explorer-compatible as, say, Sony's version - which is presented as a plain vanilla external drive to which all the typical file/folder operations apply, but it's much more convenient thing than a default "conventional" mode...
At least for me, that is...:-)
HTH
1) it required a whole bunch of s/w to install
2) pictures were grouped in hundreds, presenting folders named canon101, canon 102, etc. (or something to that extent)
Which effectively rendered my usual copying technique useless.
I could just sort by date and copy the new stuff to a HDD. First I had to figure out which folder the new picture resides, then copy the rest of that folder, then go to each folder with a bigger number and copy their contents individually..
Suffice to say it was a hassle. Such a hassle that I decided temporarily take a break from S*E coding and create a little tool that would simply do this for me.
I even started it.
Luckily, I decided to take a break, have a martini and watch one of my favorite stand-up comedians show, recorded on my PVR. While doing this I also decided to look through the software manual which came with 20D.
Guess what... It turned out that is you switch the camera to the PTP mode (XP and above) - none of the problems exists! You don't have to install any custom s/w. You don't need to dig through endless 100-split folders. Combination of XP, USB and PTP (Picture Transfer Protocol) does its magic - you see a conventional drive and a plain list of pictures (well, you have to hit open or explore context menu first, otherwise it shows an empty drive - a bug I can live with).
It's still not as clean and totally explorer-compatible as, say, Sony's version - which is presented as a plain vanilla external drive to which all the typical file/folder operations apply, but it's much more convenient thing than a default "conventional" mode...
At least for me, that is...:-)
HTH
"May the f/stop be with you!"
0
Comments
I'm not sure about all the problems you were having, but here's what I do:
I have the old, out dated 300D, and a little utility / program called zoom browser came with it. I use this, and it goes right to the card reader, I select all, download. At that time I can create a new folder or select what folder I want the images to go to. Soo simple even I can do it. After I am sure the files have been coppied to thr HD, I delete the files from the CF card through zoom browser.
I know your a lot more computer savy than I am. I just thought it might help to see how an other deals with this.
Sam
thanks for the input!
I still queered by the fact that Canon didn't have enough wits in its HQ to provide a standard explorer name extension to mirror the CF card inside. I mean - any second year college student can do that within a month.
As I said, PTP mode provides a relatively decent way to communicate with the camera on a day-to-day basis. It's just seems very strange that programming level for canon s/w is so out-of-date..
Cheers!
Nik
I'm trying to access data on CF withought extracting it from the camera, i.e. via 20D's USB connection. Had a bad expreinece with a Microdrive in the past, so I'm trying to keep the card in the camera unless I have to. Besides, the review says it's about 20% faster than going throught he most of the readers (can't comment on this, though..)
HTH
Nick
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
:
i use only card readers.
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