On Jan 31, 2013, at 3:23 PM, Aahz Maruch wrote:

> On Thu, Jan 31, 2013, Stan Halpin wrote:
>> On Jan 31, 2013, at 1:51 PM, Aahz Maruch wrote:
>>> On Thu, Jan 31, 2013, Stan Halpin wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> People have mentioned a concern with "losing" cards as a reason to go
>>>> with smaller cards, thereby minimizing the quantity of images that
>>>> might be lost. I have two thoughts about that. First, if it is a 32GB
>>>> or 64GB card in the camera and I almost certainly won't fill the card
>>>> in one day of vacation/travel shooting, then the card stays in the
>>>> camera all day. The only way to lose it is to lose the camera. If it
>>>> is a smaller capacity card that I need to swap out during the day,
>>>> then there would be more chance of physically losing or damaging the
>>>> card during or after a card swap. The second kind of "lose" of images
>>>> could be from a failure of the SD card itself. Again, I assume that
>>>> less handling of the cards will reduce the chance of causing damage
>>>> to the cards, and again the strategy of "big card, don't swap" makes
>>>> sense to me.
>>> 
>>> How do you back up your day's shooting?
>> 
>> Download to my laptop (using LR) with a backup to an external hard drive.
>> 
>> Depending on card capacity, how many cards I have with me, what is up
>> the next day, etc. I may just put the card back in the camera or I may
>> store it and put in a fresh card. At the end of a trip I would like
>> to have three copies of everything: laptop hard drive, external hard
>> drive, and originals on the card(s). If I am running short of space on
>> the card(s) I'll go ahead and reformat one or two but I try to avoid
>> that just to be safe.
> 
> Okay, so you do pop the card out to download -- that wasn't clear from
> your previous post.
> -- 

Yes, but only in the peace and quiet of a hotel room, etc. 
Back in the BD era (before digital), I was in a dugout canoe being taken across 
a small river in Panama on my way to visit a native village, a village noted 
for their artisans. Reallylooking forward to some shots of the locals at work 
and of thier finished product. Spotted a couple of Ibis along the shore. 
Snapped the last frame on the roll in the camera (PZ-1p), quickly rewound, 
reloaded. In my haste, a certain amount of rocking back and forth of the dugout 
ensued. No, I didn't drop either film or camera in the river. Instead I poked 
my thumb through the cloth shutter curtain. The end of photography for that 
trip. Lesson 1: it is worth the bother to carry a 2nd camera. Lesson 2: don't 
try to change film in a dugout canoe while in the middle of a river. I have 
since extrapolated #2 to a more general lesson: don't change recording media in 
the heat of the moment; wait for a quiet time and place, thus avoiding 
potential disasters that might befall media and/or camera.

stan


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