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wmphoto
27-09-2010, 12:57pm
Just curious as to if people keep all their images on a memory card and just keep filling up new ones or do they erase the images and start again once they have downloaded to their computer. I do the latter but I'm starting to think that if I do it too many times the memory card will start to play up (fail). With the cost of memory cards now, it may be viable just to use a new memory card each time.

kiwi
27-09-2010, 1:19pm
eh ?

memory cards are for storing photos from the camera, so you can then save onto your PC and then backup onto one or preferably more hdd's

Not for long term storage, though I suppose you could do, but $/byte HDD's are way cheaper

I dont know of any case where a CF card or SD card has failed becuase of overuse. They are solid state.

Allann
27-09-2010, 1:24pm
Memory cards don't work like old cassette tapes. You can add/remove data many, many times with no detriment to the card.

That said though, I keep the images on the card till I use it the next time just in case I accidentally delete the original and backup (created during import automatically, I love LR3). When I insert a card into the camera, I usually always format it to start a new session.

wmphoto
27-09-2010, 2:31pm
Not for long term storage, though I suppose you could do, but $/byte HDD's are way cheaper
That's a good point. I do back up all my photos to my HDD and a NAS device so I'm not so worried about that it's more the failure of the card from repeated copy / erase.

Thanks for the replies.

Xenedis
27-09-2010, 5:57pm
Just curious as to if people keep all their images on a memory card and just keep filling up new ones or do they erase the images and start again once they have downloaded to their computer.

I format my card after each shoot, but generally not before having at least two copies of the images: one on my laptop, and at least one backup (I keep two on-site backups, and one off-site backup, so I have four copies of everything).

Duane Pipe
27-09-2010, 6:03pm
I format my card after each shoot, but generally not before having at least two copies of the images: one on my laptop, and at least one backup (I keep two on-site backups, and one off-site backup, so I have four copies of everything).

Shite I get lost with whats on one buckup:lol:
I might sort them out one day, over 5000 images, mostly crap too:D

fastr1red
27-09-2010, 6:38pm
Memory has developed in leaps and bounds in the past 15 years.
Some of the first memory developed for programming had only 50-100 read write (R/W) cycles, then as memory got better it got up to around 5000 cycles. Then in the past 10 years the development of silicon technology was so high, the same materials could be reliably re-written 10's of thousands of times.
Formatting is a good idea as it tags any bad areas in the chip, so as it starts to go bad you'll find it takes longer to write to and read from.
Don't know where the current status is but pretty sure you'll be buying a bigger memory card before the one you have fails.
There are exceptions of course.

dulvariprestige
27-09-2010, 8:39pm
Like others have said, format the card in camera, don't just erase the images.

electricmic
28-09-2010, 4:32pm
I keep my images on the card as a form of back up.

Memory cards are really cheap nowadays anyway.

kiwi
28-09-2010, 4:49pm
I keep my images on the card as a form of back up.

Memory cards are really cheap nowadays anyway.

for how long

For example, I have 1tb worth of data

1tb HDD = $150 max
1tb worth of 8mb cards = 125 cards @ $40 = $5000

electricmic
29-09-2010, 3:47pm
for how long

For example, I have 1tb worth of data

1tb HDD = $150 max
1tb worth of 8mb cards = 125 cards @ $40 = $5000

Ah yes, when you get to a TB definitely.

I don't have anywhere near that as I shoot JPEG and have only been shooting about 2 years.

Cheers for pointing that out.

kiwi
29-09-2010, 4:01pm
240MB Drive = $70
30 x 8gb cards = $ 900

There is no financial price point where it makes sense unless in total you have less than say 64MB of photos.

Tonym
02-10-2010, 10:01pm
I tend to erase pics I dont like as I shoot then when the card is full I replace it with a new one and keep the full card.I also use 8gb cards and have quite a collection now, maybe I should look at getting a desktop storage device.

OzzieTraveller
03-10-2010, 8:31am
G'day all

I have always made it a practice that each time I am uploading from card to computer, that I cut 'n paste from the card ... ie: the card is emptied immediately & nothing remains on the card for any period of time at all
Cards are formatted 3-4 times a year to refresh the card's FAT (internal index for the non-computer people)

To take the process one stage further ...
images are
1- cut 'n pasted into a folder called "today's pix"
2- then viewed full screen and any with issues are junked immediately ... this gets rid of 10-20% [ie: exposure, focus, lighting, mood, whatever...]
3- then reviewed again for 'keepers' which are copied to another folder ... this keeps about 25%-30% of the ex-camera images [I am brutal here]
4- after 24hrs [for second-thoughts] all images remaining in "today's pix" are deleted ready for another set of images
5- In my file storage area, I have a folder called "best-of....." where I keep the 'best-of-the-keepers" and this contains from 1% to 5% of the ex-camera images

All images -especially the "best of..." folders- are backed up to 2 sets of external drives - each with differing home-locations [theft, fire etc]

Little bit off the original topic, but I hope this helps other APers a bit ...
Regards, Phil

oldfart
03-10-2010, 9:10am
Anyone who keeps their photos on CF / SD Media hasn't taken enough photos.

as someone with over 4TB of data backed up, the price for that many cards would kill a sheiks budget.

Error99
05-10-2010, 12:16am
Anyone who keeps their photos on CF / SD Media hasn't taken enough photos.

as someone with over 4TB of data backed up, the price for that many cards would kill a sheiks budget.

I'd have about the same - about half I've burnt on to CD's & DVD's, the rest is on hard drives.

Couldn't ever imagine filling a card and not formatting it in the camera after I've downloaded.
All my cards get formatted every time they go back in the camera

la lumiere
05-10-2010, 12:57am
When I insert a card into the camera, I usually always format it to start a new session.

Couldn't ever imagine filling a card and not formatting it in the camera after I've downloaded.
All my cards get formatted every time they go back in the camera

Cards are formatted 3-4 times a year to refresh the card's FAT (internal index for the non-computer people.

Would someone be able to explain how and why cards need to be formatted each time they are used? What happens if you don't do it? Thanks.

OzzieTraveller
05-10-2010, 8:49am
G'day La L

You ask about formatting cards ...
Cards [like all other computer storage devices] store stuff in little packages of data spread around the card/hard disk etc.
The operating system looks after creating an index [called the File Allocation Table] which shows "what stuff is where"

Whenever you erase-all-images, all that occurs is that the operating system deletes the index, ready for the next batch of stuff to be plonked onto the card/hard disk wherever the operating system reckons it'll fit. This means that [theoretically] anyone at any time can recover your "deleted" data [esp from your old computer hard disks] ... and for us, a camera shop can attempt recovery of accidentally deleted images, etc

By Formatting a card/storage device, you are "re-magnetising" the whole device and cleaning out the bits of rubbish that may or may-not [after a while of use] still be a complete image

I have some software that is designed to recover deleted images .... readily available software, just put the 'faulty' or 'erased' card in the reader, kick off the software, go & boil the billy and 20-30 minutes later it shows me every possible image on the card ... even when the camera & Windows just says "no image"

Hope this helps a bit ...
Regards, Phil

ZedEx
05-10-2010, 8:58am
I have a fella who comes into my shop and uses CF cards as his only backup source. You may think he's crazy, but he's a man who used to shoot reams upon reams of slide film, and went through the very expensive process of having our lab develop and mount them, each and every week. Putting it in financial terms, he says he spends much less on purchasing Sandisk Extreme CF cards each week than he would otherwise. He recently shot a play all the way through dress rehearsal to final night performance and shot around 20,000 images. Not something I would do, but I have also heard that CF cards are the most stable, sturdy medium to storm images on longer-term

Kerro
05-10-2010, 9:52am
I have taken over 20,000 photos with my 350D, mostly crap I might add. However since joining AP they are getting better. As I shoot Raw and Jpeg my pic files are quite large. 2 backups to separate hard drives before formatting the card, in camera.
Cf cards v hard drives. No contest. I bought a 2TB HD 3 weeks ago at JB HiFi for $169. May get another one today.
I may not know a lot about photography, but I have been involved with home computers for over 30 years and believe me I learned the hard way about losing stuff by not having a backup.

Kerro

kiwi
05-10-2010, 11:07am
I have a fella who comes into my shop and uses CF cards as his only backup source. You may think he's crazy, but he's a man who used to shoot reams upon reams of slide film, and went through the very expensive process of having our lab develop and mount them, each and every week. Putting it in financial terms, he says he spends much less on purchasing Sandisk Extreme CF cards each week than he would otherwise. He recently shot a play all the way through dress rehearsal to final night performance and shot around 20,000 images. Not something I would do, but I have also heard that CF cards are the most stable, sturdy medium to storm images on longer-term


I do think he's crazy to be honest, I cant think of any financial justification for storing images on CF cards

Just a simple $/mb equation on any level makes no sense, even if like me you have three storage areas

What if he has a fire and his CF cards are destroyed etc ?

fastr1red
05-10-2010, 11:59am
G'day La L


By Formatting a card/storage device, you are "re-magnetising" the whole device and cleaning out the bits of rubbish that may or may-not [after a while of use] still be a complete image




Just a quick 1 for you there Phil, Formatting a card on most devices does NOT remagnetise the card. Please be aware of this. It does rewrite the FAT with a new index thereby removing tags to old files, however, and please note this, files CAN still be recovered from formatted disks or cards. There are ways to wipe them clean, and yes magnetising a card does do that (not completely), formatting won't.

The risk people take by storing on cards is thay are easily transportable, ie just pick up a couple of cards and sit on top of a stereo speaker or other magnetised device for a while and see if you can recover all your pictures.

I worked in forensics for some time and tasked to do just that, recover files from formatted storage, (Including magnetic media)

Analog6
05-10-2010, 1:09pm
I still have some I bought in 2005 when I got my first DSLR and they have had many, many erasures and rewrites and so far (touch wood) not one has failed on me.

Speedway
05-10-2010, 2:01pm
My computer is set to erase images when downloading is finished. I then delete the obvious duds then copy these to my 2nd HDD and then to a 3rd external drive, then as I work On them I do the same. when the folder gets big enough or I have finished with it I burn it to 3 DVD's which are then stored in different places. With 1tb HDD's at under $100 and blank DVD's less than.05 cents each, storing on memory cards is totally uneconomical.
Keith.

Speedway
05-10-2010, 2:01pm
My computer is set to erase images when downloading is finished. I then delete the obvious duds then copy these to my 2nd HDD and then to a 3rd external drive, then as I work On them I do the same. when the folder gets big enough or I have finished with it I burn it to 3 DVD's which are then stored in different places. With 1tb HDD's at under $100 and blank DVD's less than.05 cents each, storing on memory cards is totally uneconomical.
Keith.

flame70
05-10-2010, 2:08pm
I'd be a bit cautious if your computer is automatically deleting your files off your card before you've even checked you've had a perfect download. Also I don't know where you can get blank DVD's less than.05 cents each but if you've a link please let me know cheers.

calloyd
05-10-2010, 2:16pm
With over 70,000 photos (over 400GB), storing on memory cards isn't an option. I format each card after downloading and saving to 2 external hard drives, one I work on daily and the other as a backup. A third, which is not backed up so often unfortunately, is stored off site with my son in Adelaide.

I can't imagine trying to keep track of what would be on each memory card if that was my method, at least on the hard drive I can organise folders, delete the duds and find anything I want reasonably quickly. I've had a hard drive fail - that's why I keep two at home and one somewhere else.

wmphoto
05-10-2010, 8:31pm
All interesting replies. The reason I originally asked the question was because I had heard (and read)of people who use a new memory card every time and keep the full one as a backup. It didn't make total sense to me other than for the reason of a card failing and after reading all the replies it would appear to be that few people would choose this option. As to the reason why :confused013, especially when you consider the $/mb as pointed out by Kiwi.

la lumiere
05-10-2010, 10:58pm
Thanks Ozzie T and Fastr1red for your replies. What happens if you don't ever format the card - Is there a disadvantage or problem? Does the card not work properly or is space just taken up with junk? I've just had a quick read of the Formatting the card section in my camera manual which says (as indicated above by others) that only the file management information is changed. The actual data is not completely erased.
My question is - What is the advantage/disadvantge of simply deleting your files over deleting and then formatting?

ZedEx
06-10-2010, 9:11am
I can't answer that in technical terms, but I can tell you that it WILL more than likely lead to a card failure. I have seen cards come in for recovery (I do card recoveries at work) that have about 50 subfolders that are all mostly empty, as the person has usually never formatted and just deletes pics here and there. I think with formatting, any tiny errors that are on the card get marked so that they don't get read and misinterpreted.


Thanks Ozzie T and Fastr1red for your replies. What happens if you don't ever format the card - Is there a disadvantage or problem? Does the card not work properly or is space just taken up with junk? I've just had a quick read of the Formatting the card section in my camera manual which says (as indicated above by others) that only the file management information is changed. The actual data is not completely erased.
My question is - What is the advantage/disadvantge of simply deleting your files over deleting and then formatting?

wmphoto
06-10-2010, 9:21pm
Very timely.......I was in a camera store today and a woman came in complaining that her camera wouldn't read her memory card anymore. The guy asked her when she last formatted the card - "What's that?" was the reply. He asked her how many memory cards she had - "One". How long have you been using that card - "About six months". He picked up the camera, formatted the memory card and hey presto everything works again (and he sold her another memory card - just in case).

GerryK
06-10-2010, 10:27pm
I am a simple person. Cards are commodities. Use them, treat them well, and when they died get another one. I tend to delete & defrag which has worked well for me. Also have recovery software to retrieve deleted files. End game is no digital storage device will 'save a file or image' for ever, so backup regularly and at least print the 'keeper' images if not print & mount.