Card Reader Protocol help
Hi
Well, I decided that the time has come to give RAW a try. I would really like to do this with the photos I took in Jasper this past weekend, but I really haven't a clue how to go about it. I bought a card reader today. Can any of you walk me through this? In simple terms? :huh
Thanks so much.
ann
And, today I had 2 lock ups! So I'll get the firmware upgrades done too.
Maybe next thing I'll do is clean the sensor!
Well, I decided that the time has come to give RAW a try. I would really like to do this with the photos I took in Jasper this past weekend, but I really haven't a clue how to go about it. I bought a card reader today. Can any of you walk me through this? In simple terms? :huh
Thanks so much.
ann
And, today I had 2 lock ups! So I'll get the firmware upgrades done too.
Maybe next thing I'll do is clean the sensor!
0
Comments
Did you shoot the images in Jasper in RAW? If not, you can't turn jpegs into RAW, only the other way around.
As far as card readers, there are two main types...USB and Firewire. Essentially the way it works is you plug the card reader into the appropriate port in your computer, and plug the card into it. You should see what looks like a drive icon show up on your desktop and be able to look at all images on the card. Where you go from there depends a lot on which software you have. Assuming you have no special photo handling software, other than PS, you should copy the images from the card into a folder on your computer's hard drive. At that point, treat the images just like you would any other image.
Does that help?
As far as the lockups...two questions:
(1) Which lens did this happen with?
(2) What's your firmware level? (set mode to P and look at the very last menu item).
"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over."-Hunter S.Thompson
So I guess my remaining question is if I get the cards from card to card reader to computer, do I need to tackle the RAW conversion right away?
Thanks
ann
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Nope. A file is a file is a file. You can process anytime you want...and as many times in as many different ways as you want.
"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over."-Hunter S.Thompson
ann
PS Why is the card reader necessary? Why won't RAW transfer via usb like jpegs?
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Hi Ann,
It will. There are two ways you can get the files out of your camera/flash memory. The first way is to plug your camera into your computer, where it will show up as a hard drive. That's awkward and a pain.
The easiest way, as Fish explained, is to buy a cheap Card Reader. As Fish said, they can be either USB or Firewire. A Card Reader is just a cheap plastic thing a little bigger than a business card. It looks something like this.
You plug it into your computer. I use a USB2 card reader, so I just plug it into a USB port. Then you put your camera's memory card into the card reader, which like magic shows up as another hard drive on your computer.
From there, you have two more choices. You can simply use Windows Explorer to drag the files off the memory card and onto your computer's hard drive. They'll still be RAW files.
Or you can view the photos with software that can open RAW files, process them and then save them. Once you process them, you can't save them as RAW files. Most of us save the processed file as uncompressed as possible - so we keep them as TIFFs or Photoshop files.
Personally, I use Canon's software to look at the RAW files on the memory card. I use Windows Explorer to drag the RAW files I want to save, onto my hard drive. That way I always have the RAW file. When I process them, I change the file's name, and save it as a Photoshop file with layers, and also as a jpeg (for uploading to smugmug.)
So when I'm done, I usually have three versions of a shot that I like: the original RAW file, a Photoshop file, and a jpeg.
I hope this makes sense to you.
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
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As to your question about whether you need the card reader software or not, that's entirely dependent on the reader itself and your operating system. RTFM and see what it says for your particular situation.
Good luck!
"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over."-Hunter S.Thompson
Hi sid
Well it does make sense.....
Currently, or up til now, I have left a usb cable plugged in to my tower. I simply plug the camera in with that usb. With my sony's, it reads as drive g: memory stick, and the photos get put into a folder in 'my pictures' (xp).
When I put the canon onto the usb, a diffderent set of prompts comes up - use canon something or other, use 'my pictures', or use jasc psp 9. I choose use 'my pictures'. This only copies jpgs. I wonder if I chose the canon software option, or PSP9, if I'd get the RAW files. Could return the card reader and get my $15 bucks back Oh, wait, I still need the firmware update.....
Thanks for outlining what you do with the files after downloading them. I guess I was remembering having read that one could not save a processed RAW file as RAW.
Thanks for your help
ann
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RTFM - not something I do often - why read when one can ask!:D
Thanks fish
ann
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Try using Canon's Digital Photo Professional. It should be on a CD with your camera.
Here's my workflow. It's a bit clumsy for large batches of pics, but I'm selective about what I save.
I put the Compoact Flash card in the Card reader. I use Digital Photo Professional (DPP) to look at the contents of the card (the card reader shows up as another letter hard drive.) You can set DPP to show thumbnails of all the pics, including RAW files. Either double click on the thumbnail you want to mess with, or Alt-right arrow with your cursor clicked on a thumbnail. (If you Alt-right arrow to open a file, youy must close the file with Alt-left arrow. If you click on the X at the top right corner, you'll close DPP.)
I used to mess with the image with DPP, then Save As to a hard drive. That would convert it to a TIFF. Not anymore, though. Now I view the thumbnails, put a check on the keepers, then use Windows Explorer to drag the keepers from the flash card to a hard drive.
Once the shots are on the hard drive, I can play with them either with DPP or with Photoshop. And as long as I "Save As" and change the file name, I'll still have my RAW file.
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au