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storing images—On the road...
Storing images at home is easy. When it’s time to hit the road with your
digital camera, the problems begin. With traditional cameras, you just stuff
the bag with film and shoot till it runs out. Then you go buy some more. With
digital cameras it isn’t that easy. When you take a lot of photos or are on a
long trip, you’ll eventually reach the point where your memory cards are all
full and you have to move images to another storage device. This is especially
true when you capture high-resolution images or use file formats such as
RAW or TIFF that give you the best image quality but create huge files—15
Megabytes and even larger in some cases. Here are your alternatives on an
extended photo shoot or expedition:
- Find a place to burn CD/DVDs for you. This will now be done by most
photo stores but they are often clueless. (One store used software that recog-
nized and copied only JPEGs, leaving RAW images on the card where they
could easily have been deleted since the reasonable assumption was that they
has also been copied.) - Buy more or larger memory cards. This is a common solution but it
can be expensive if your trip is long or you are a prolific shooter. - Carry a notebook computer. Not only may you already have one of
these, but its large screen and ability to run your choice of applications
provides you with a mobile version of the typical desktop system. However, a
notebook computer isn’t always the ideal portable device because of its size,
weight, short battery life, and long start-up time. On a car trip it’s perfect, es-
pecially with a voltage inverter so you can power it from the car’s battery. On
airline, hiking, or canoe trips it’s difficult or impossible. On trips out of the
country you may need voltage adapters or converters. If you attach a portable
hard drive to the notebook, you can just plug it into your other system when
you return home. You can then transfer the files or editing the images right
on the portable drive. - Buy a portable storage device based on a hard drive or a CD/DVD
drive. Some of these devices have card slots or connect directly to the camera.
After transferring your images you can then erase your card to make room for
new images and resume shooting. When you get back to the setup you use for
editing, printing, and distributing images, you copy or move the images from
the portable storage device to that system. Many portable storage devices,
including some models of Apple’s iPod, also let you view your stored images
on the device’s LCD monitor or on a connected TV—and even pan, rotate, and
zoom the images. Some also let you print directly to a printer without using a
computer and combine digital photos, digital videos, and MP3 music. With a
device such as this you’ll be able to create slide shows with special transitions,
pans, and accompanying music and play them back anywhere. If you consid-
er one of these devices, be sure it can handle the image formats you use. RAW
and other non-JPEG formats are often not supported. - Use file transfer. A service called GoToMyPC is widely used by people
to access and operate their home or office computer from other computers
anywhere in the world even those in libraries and cyber-cafes. If you sub-
scribe to this service you can also transfer files and folders between PCs, or an
attached memory card or camera, simply by dragging and dropping between
screens. There are also other peer-to-peer file transfer systems available.
storing imAges—on the roAd
The Epson P-5000 is a
portable storage and
viewing device with an
80 Gigabyte hard drive
and a 4 inch screen.
The iPod Camera
Connector provides
a fast, easy way to
transfer images from
your digital camera
to your iPod. Simply
plug the iPod Camera
Connector into the iPod
dock connector, plug
in your camera’s USB
cable, and watch your
images make their way
to your iPod.
Some iPods can both
store and display
photos.