File storage?
pahl
Registered Users Posts: 107 Major grins
I have been using .jpg files on my camera because it was easy and RAW did not let me get as many photos on a SD card.
I have been playing around a bit with RAW and like what I see so far.
I am going to start shooting the basketball games all in RAW.
The trouble is memory.
I have three 1 gig SD cards.
With jpg files I can get 300+ photos on a card.
The weekend basketball tournament are 2 or 3 games. This has been working out great with my memory cards as I just about have one full at the end of the game. Then I switch cards for the start of another game.
Shooting RAW I am only going to get around 90 photos on my little 1 gig card. I will fill up all three of my little 1 gig cards with just one game.
Other then buying more or bigger memory cards what options do I have?
Sometime I only have 10 minutes between games.
I have been looking at thing like the 40 GB PhotoBank USB Digital Image Storage Device. How good do these work? How fast do they work?
Guess I have the option of bring the laptop and dumping the memory cards too.
What is everyone else doing when shooting a lot of photos in one day?
Once I have the RAW files on the PC I am going to run into storage problem on the desktop/laptop too. My pentax software lets me extract the jpg files with the RAW files. One basketball game file is going to have the RAW/jpg files, the converted tiff files and the files I save as crops.
My plan is to get a very large hard drive and/or burn each game file to a dvd.
I can see were the RAW file is going to give me so much more to work with, but man they are going to take up a lot of space and I only have a 6 meg pix camera.
I have been playing around a bit with RAW and like what I see so far.
I am going to start shooting the basketball games all in RAW.
The trouble is memory.
I have three 1 gig SD cards.
With jpg files I can get 300+ photos on a card.
The weekend basketball tournament are 2 or 3 games. This has been working out great with my memory cards as I just about have one full at the end of the game. Then I switch cards for the start of another game.
Shooting RAW I am only going to get around 90 photos on my little 1 gig card. I will fill up all three of my little 1 gig cards with just one game.
Other then buying more or bigger memory cards what options do I have?
Sometime I only have 10 minutes between games.
I have been looking at thing like the 40 GB PhotoBank USB Digital Image Storage Device. How good do these work? How fast do they work?
Guess I have the option of bring the laptop and dumping the memory cards too.
What is everyone else doing when shooting a lot of photos in one day?
Once I have the RAW files on the PC I am going to run into storage problem on the desktop/laptop too. My pentax software lets me extract the jpg files with the RAW files. One basketball game file is going to have the RAW/jpg files, the converted tiff files and the files I save as crops.
My plan is to get a very large hard drive and/or burn each game file to a dvd.
I can see were the RAW file is going to give me so much more to work with, but man they are going to take up a lot of space and I only have a 6 meg pix camera.
http://pahl.smugmug.com
Pentax istDL
50mm-f/1.4
10-17mm fish-eye
18-55mm kit lens
Sigma EF-500 DG Super Flash[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
Pentax istDL
50mm-f/1.4
10-17mm fish-eye
18-55mm kit lens
Sigma EF-500 DG Super Flash[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
0
Comments
I have 3 1GB cards as well, and I shoot RAW only. If I shoot two cards worth, I typically switch to JPEG on the third, with the thought that JPEG is better than nothing at all. I also have a laptop, so for situations where I will be shooting longer that 3 cards, and where power or my car is convenient, I bring the laptop and dump photos to it.
chimp in the field too (deleting the junk). Another alternative is to be more
selective about when you snap--this is the least desirable though.
I frequently shoot dance concerts and can fill my 1GB card in one piece (3-5 minutes); I rotate my three cards between camera, downloading on the PD70X, and spare. I've had great success using this method for many shows, and a weekend event (three 14-hour days solid shooting :wow:crazy). No time for chimping, just shoot, dump, reload, repeat.
http://www.chrislaudermilkphoto.com/
Failure is not an option for me,
So i just keep pressing the shutter and trying again.
http://allensfoto.net
:gun2
IMHO the PD70X is one of the best solutions available. It does exactly what I need it to and is rock-solid. I forgot to mention it uses standard AA batteries, so getting spares is easy, is cheaper than the proprietary ones, and is much more convenient than the embedded ones you cannot swap in the field.
http://www.chrislaudermilkphoto.com/
Sounds good to me. I have done searchs for PD70X and can not seem to come up with anything. Could you please give me a link to were I buy one.
Thanks for the replies...
Pentax istDL
50mm-f/1.4
10-17mm fish-eye
18-55mm kit lens
Sigma EF-500 DG Super Flash[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
Never have used anything smaller than my 2gb lexars and they were way too small at times now I have 2 8gb cards and the last one cost me only $115 + $5 s/h from New Egg....if you are using one camera then just number the cards and shoot them in proper rotation or just rely on your cameras numbering system to keep in order...
Remember if you drop a SD card it will still work....if that portable drive hits the concrete...well it could be dead in the water and everything you saved to it also....
just my 'umble opinon.
I don't like to spend too much on "over head" for event shoots. The less time I spend, the fewer pics I have to sell to make a profit. Spending a fortune on storage devices is not cost effective to me. I keep last season's photos on my hardrive, but I don't need to keep every season.
So, my next suggestion would be look for the Nexto as that is supposed to be a very good alternative.
As far as cost/space ratio: Nexto OTG 40GB is listed at about $166 (at eastgear.com) vs say the cheapest 2GB CF at newegg (Transcend at $20 each) for about $400. If I stick with a card I trust, SanDisk Ultra II @ $37.99 each, that's $760. Plus I have a stack of 20 cards to juggle. You decide.
An anecdotal story comparing the imagebucket device + 3 cards vs a big ol' stack of cards: Shooting a dance event (I keep going back to this event...) I had no trouble keeping where I was straight, my shooting buddy was juggling something like two dozen cards of varying sizes all day and ended up a) using a lot ot table space to keep them straight, and b) got them mixed up anyway, nearly losing a couple card's worth if images by putting them in the "done" pile instead of the "to burn" pile (he also had 3 of those portable DVD burners & some assistants running them).
Hmm, looking more to make it more uneven, the Nexto Ultra 160GB is $320 at eastgear--that's 80 2GB CF cards (so $1600 or $3039 from the above quotes!). Bumping to 8GB CF cards doesn't help (20 Transcends at $89 or $1800).
So, from what I see to get equal storage space in the field if you go with the pile o' CF cards you will spend a fortune in comparison with an imagebucket device. Even the more expensive Epson looks like a deal here. That doesn't even get into how to carry them around (1 moderate-sized box vs numeroud little boxes). I dunno, seems like a no-brainer to me.
http://www.chrislaudermilkphoto.com/
Not sure if this is right on point, but...
I'm doing all this on a pretty tight budget (okay--I'm cheap). But my computer is also on the low end--so I don't have much storage space on it--but I still like to have access to all the photos (even if I don't access them all that often) and I just never seem to get around to cutting CDs or DVDs.
So, I ran across a program by a guy on the site www.serverelements.com that uses a cut down version of linux that will turn an old PC into a file server. Basically you create a boot disk with this program, and it creates a file server that is accessible to any other computer on your home network. I'm using a very old first generation pentium with about 48 megs of RAM to host this. With Hard drive prices so low--for less than a $100 bucks you can get sometimes around 250 gig--you can have a ton of storage and be accessible from several computers.
There are several versions on that site, but I just use the free one (NASLITE) and haven't had anyproblems in the more the a year that I've had it. It lets me clean my photos off my normal PC once I'm done messing arround with them. With images being several meg in size each, it doesn't take much to fill up some serious space...
Just something to think about.
Will
Will
________________________
www.willspix.smugmug.com
You might also want to look at FreeNAS. Same idea, but based on FreeBSD.
- RE
www.rossfrazier.com/blog
My Equipment:
Canon EOS 5D w/ battery grip
Backup Canon EOS 30D | Canon 28 f/1.8 | Canon 24 f/1.4L Canon 50mm f/1.4 | Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DI Macro | Canon 70-200 F/2.8 L | Canon 580 EX II Flash and Canon 550 EX Flash
Apple MacBook Pro with dual 24" monitors
Domke F-802 bag and a Shootsac by Jessica Claire
Infiniti QX4
Canon: 7D, BG-E7, 50/1.2, 85/1.2 II, 16-35 II, 24-70, 24-105 IS, 70-200/2.8 IS, 100-400 IS, (2) 580EX II, MR-14EX, 1.4X II & 2X TC
Other: Sigma 150/2.8 Macro, Kenko Tubes
Safety is a key factor - one poor guy was using an 8GB card, and it corrupted when nearly full - that's a lot of photos to lose, even if they are RAW.
www.ivarborst.nl & smugmug