Backup of SD cards while at WDW

Kies99

I Can has Cheezburger???
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Nov 9, 2006
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I have 2 1GB SD cards for my camera.

I plan on filling these up and then some at WDW.

I would prefer NOT to take my laptop with me.

Any ideas or products that I can store the pics on that are reliable, cheap and most of all portable?
 
"Cheap" and "reliable" usually aren't together the same product.

Why not just have your pics burnt to a CD, either at the parks ($13) or at a local Walgreen's (cheaper).
 
I do bring my laptop, and at the end of each day I transfer my images from the memory card to the laptop. Additionally, I also burn a CD of that days images on a nightly basis. This way I have two immediate backups - one on the laptop and one on the CD.

I know you don't want to bring the laptop, but my opinion is better safe than sorry - some of the pictures you will take are priceless the moment they are captured!
 
I do bring my laptop, and at the end of each day I transfer my images from the memory card to the laptop. Additionally, I also burn a CD of that days images on a nightly basis. This way I have two immediate backups - one on the laptop and one on the CD.

I know you don't want to bring the laptop, but my opinion is better safe than sorry - some of the pictures you will take are priceless the moment they are captured!

Most likely I will bring the laptop. I definitely want to have immediate backups so I don't loose anything. Was just hoping there was an inexpensive portable drive I could use so I didn't have to bring it (packing considerations)

"Cheap" and "reliable" usually aren't together the same product. Why not just have your pics burnt to a CD, either at the parks ($13) or at a local Walgreen's (cheaper).

:rotfl: Yes, let me clarify. Howabout "Relatively Inexpensive" as opposed to "Cheap". Also, we'll be staying onsite with no car. Can you have your personal pics on your own SD card burned to a CD at the parks? If so, where and how much?
 

:rotfl: Yes, let me clarify. Howabout "Relatively Inexpensive" as opposed to "Cheap". Also, we'll be staying onsite with no car. Can you have your personal pics on your own SD card burned to a CD at the parks? If so, where and how much?
When I said you can have them burnt at the parks, there is a photo shop near the entrance of every Disney park that can burn your pics to a CD from your cards. It costs about $13 per CD.


I think you are looking for something like this: http://www.costco.com/Browse/Produc...=2109&Ns=P_Price|1||P_SignDesc1&Sp=C&topnav= . I don't know what your version of inexpensive is.




I am in the "I bring my laptop and burn backup CDs in the room every night" camp.
 
When I said you can have them burnt at the parks, there is a photo shop near the entrance of every Disney park that can burn your pics to a CD from your cards. It costs about $13 per CD.

I wasn't aware of that. Thanks. Last time I was there was April of 1999 :scared: !
 
I took my laptop with me.

I also wanted to be able to look at the pictures every night, on something bigger than two inches. :)
 
Does anyone know if there is a place in or near the parks to get cards burned to a DVD?
 
It would help if I wasn't sick and read that you wanted NOT to bring your laptop.
 
"Cheap" and "reliable" usually aren't together the same product.

Why not just have your pics burnt to a CD, either at the parks ($13) or at a local Walgreen's (cheaper).

I do not know if this is still the case, but in the past I have been told that WDW limits the number of images per CD to only 100 even if that means leaving tons of unused space. Therefore you have to buy more CDs from them compared to elsewhere.

Also, $13 seems low. I believe they raised the price above that. Even at $13 if you had 1,000 shots, you are talking $130. At a drugstore, you would only be talking around $10-15.

I say bring the laptop and burn them yourself for $0.25/ea. and you might have the option of using DVDs on your laptop. DVDs are a must for anyone shooting RAW. It would just take so many CDs.

Kevin
 
You may want to look at this thread.

No matter what you do, remember that hard drives are the least reliable storage medium you can choose. If you store all your photos on one single drive and it fails... well, I'm guessing that you won't be very happy! And hard drive failure, especially of the 2.5" drives used in laptops and photo storage units, is very common.

Redundancy is the best option, no matter how you store them. My method of choice is use a laptop and burn duplicate DVDs (CDs are too small to store many photos in RAW format.) If you don't burn DVDs or CDs, then a laptop + USB hard drive. If you don't bring a laptop, then two photo storage units storing the same pictures.
 
You may want to look at this thread.

No matter what you do, remember that hard drives are the least reliable storage medium you can choose. If you store all your photos on one single drive and it fails... well, I'm guessing that you won't be very happy!

Groucho,

You keep mentioning this in various threads as if you've had a bad experience. If so, I'm sorry your experience was bad. I agree hard drive (HD) failure can be a disheartening experience, but in reality, it is not at all that common. I have been in the computer industry since 1980 working in technical support at 2nd and 3rd level arenas for large and small firms alike, and even owned my own tech support business for a time. I currently support a state chapter of a large non-profit, with approximately 250 hard drives installed in various laptops. They run day-in and day-out, in offices, on the road, and even out in the field in bad weather (the firm is a global conservation concern and the PCs are not treated with kindness). None have failed in the two years I have been with the organization. During my years of experience, only one HD has failed on a PC that permanently lost data. Other failed HDs (which were few) were still accessible using data recovery techniques. I have retired thousands more drives that were still running than those that died. Statistics do show that hard drives do have a higher failure rate than other mediums, although floppy drives are much worse and the verdict is still out on home-made CDs. But, in practice, my experience shows that the statistics don't match reality. HD makers build 'em to last far beyond their practical life.

The reason I mention this at all is to reassure people that the likelihood of a hard drive failing is small, especially considering the life of PCs averages 3 to 5 years. And, HDs that fail do not normally lose the data. It just cannot be accessed anymore. It can be normally recovered, though.

I did not mean to steal this thread and will turn it back over to the originator. If anyone has questions about this, please PM me.
 
With the cost of SD cards now, why not just buy 2 2GB cards from newegg for $20 each (or more than 2 if you need it).

FWIW, I brought the laptop last trip, but the CD burner was on the fritz so I just downloaded the pics to the laptop and kept what I could on the SD cards, only deleting them when I need the space. That however was when I only had 3 1GB cards, now I have 8GB total in SD cards, plus the laptop and also an external hard drive, so the next trip I'll have more than enough space and backup.

As for the hard drive issues. I have had 3 different hard drives crash on me (actully 4, but the 4th was a backup/secondary drive and I was able to get stuff off before it went completely dead). First time it happened I lost about 400 pics taken during oldest DS' first year. Back then I wasn't as careful about backing up my files. So anything you can do to have them backed up in a number of different was is a good thing.
 
I have had more than one bad experience - not only have I had many of my own drives go bad (I have a lot of PCs and hard drives in the house - as in, well into double digits), I've done tech support professionally for over 10 years, supporting hundreds of users, plus have done a lot of "home" consulting on the side - PC building, repairing, etc. (I've also been using computers of some sort since probably 1979 or so, starting with the Atari 400 - this was when a floppy drive was a luxury, forget hard drives!) For the past 5-6 years, it's been about 95% laptops, mainly Dells (past 6 years or so) and before that IBMs. I've seen every major brand of hard drive fail, I've seen every laptop drives fail, desktop drives, big SCSI server drives - you name it. Of course, some are better than others, and some are worse. Early Western Digital 1.6g drives were dropping like flies about nine years ago (they also screwed up and sent me about 8 extra warranty replacement drives! every day, another one or two would arrive), and IBM had some many reliability problems with some of their 30g and 40g 3.5" drives that they lost all the goodwill they'd built up with their good, smaller drives - it's possible that might have even led them towards selling their HD business to Hitachi. IBM also had pretty severe issues with the drives that have been in Dell laptops for quite a while, finally Dell starts replacing them with Fujitsus recently.

Unfortunately, the majority (but probably by a slim margin) of laptop hard drive failures I've seen have resulted in a completely unreadable drive. Fortunately, this is not always the case. Failures generally happen in two ways:

1. The hard drive begins getting bad sectors. As often as not, they are in unused or rarely used areas of the drive and go unnoticed, until one affects a file required for Windows startup. This is when the drive can have data be recovered - either by using something like BartPE (a very handy utility, basically a stripped-down WinXP on CD that can read the local drive and copy files across the network or even burn a CD), or by putting the drive into another system as a slave or with a USB cable (I keep a ByteCC cable around for this purpose.) Some drives that people assume are OK fall into this category and are in fact faulty, enough to quality for a warranty replacement, because the bad sectors are not noticed. Sometimes the bad sectors are "sort of" readable, and you'll see things like Windows taking a particular long time to boot.

2. The drive is completely unreadable, sometimes unrecognized by the PC. This is often accompanied by unhappy clicking noises - with laptop drives, you sometimes have to put your ear to the system to hear it properly.

I'm not trying to question your experience, but I've seen far too many people lose a lot of data due to hard drive failures. It is absolutely a serious problem and anyone ignoring it does so at their peril. I honestly hope no one here has to experience a hard drive failure. But odds are, you will - sooner or later.
 
If anyone's curious about their own hard drives, you can check their SMART status with this free tool (PassMark DiskCheckup). It will also (over time) attempt to predict when your drive will fail. It doesn't work for USB-connected drives, though, as there is no way to get the SMART data from them.
 





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