WillCAD
Where there's a Will there's a way
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2004
- Messages
- 5,836
It's a horrible thing to happen to anybody - one of our fellow DISers had her camera stolen from her stroller at MK:
http://www.disboards.com/showthread.php?t=1256090
But this person's tragedy serves to graphically illustrate a dead horse that I have been flogging for years - don't buy one big memory card, buy a bunch of smaller cards and split up your pics!
kandb lost not only her WDW pics, but some precious pics from prior to her WDW trip that she hadn't downloaded from the memory card. This was a double tragedy that is probably all too common. I see so many people, even my own family and friends, leaving pics on their cameras without downloading, sometimes for weeks or even months at a time, without even realizing the danger they are facing - the loss of precious photographic memories.
And it's not just camera theft that threatens our pics. No, even in today's digital-is-god climate, there are entirely toom many people who accidentally hit "Delete All" instead of "Delete", or who format their cards in camera before downloading pics. Partially, this is the fault of digicam manufacturers who put the "Delete All" option on every pic instead of burrying it in menus along with ISO change and white balance control. But it's also partially the fault of folks who are not comfortable enough with their digicams to understand what buttons they're pressing.
Besides accidental deletion, there's also camera loss. Who among us has not set the camera down someplace and walked off without it? Certainly not I; I once left my $600 worth of Canon Rebel G and Sigma 28-200 lens hanging from a chair in the bakery at the front of IOA. Fortunately, a TM found it and it was waiting for me when my mind started working again. But what happens to those poor souls who lose their cameras permanently with a whole week's worth of WDW pics on the single 50 terrabyte memory card that they got on sale at Best Buy for $1.95 after 12 mail-in rebates? They lose their freakin' pics, that's what, and that's heartbreaking.
Then there's the age-old problem of camera malfunction. Yes, it's rare, but every so often a camera fails to operate after only 25 seconds in the water at POTC, or after suffering Decelleration Trauma when the kids knock it off the table at Crystal Palace, or after a good thorough cleaning (to get the Coke off it that you spilled in Pinochio Village Haus). Though rare, these things do sometimes occur, and if the memory card inside the camera shares the same fate, your pics can go the way of the dodo fast.
All of these horrible things that happen to cameras and memory cards can be prevented by exercising a little more caution, but even the best of us sometimes realize while riding Dr. Suess that our camera is no longer dangling from our shoulders where it should be, and when that does happen, we can take solace in the fact that only a small portion of our precious vacation pics are actually in the camera, while the rest are sitting safely back in our room safe on other memory cards or CDs.
Unless they're all on the camera, in which case we are, of course, royally screwed.
YMMV.
http://www.disboards.com/showthread.php?t=1256090
But this person's tragedy serves to graphically illustrate a dead horse that I have been flogging for years - don't buy one big memory card, buy a bunch of smaller cards and split up your pics!
kandb lost not only her WDW pics, but some precious pics from prior to her WDW trip that she hadn't downloaded from the memory card. This was a double tragedy that is probably all too common. I see so many people, even my own family and friends, leaving pics on their cameras without downloading, sometimes for weeks or even months at a time, without even realizing the danger they are facing - the loss of precious photographic memories.
And it's not just camera theft that threatens our pics. No, even in today's digital-is-god climate, there are entirely toom many people who accidentally hit "Delete All" instead of "Delete", or who format their cards in camera before downloading pics. Partially, this is the fault of digicam manufacturers who put the "Delete All" option on every pic instead of burrying it in menus along with ISO change and white balance control. But it's also partially the fault of folks who are not comfortable enough with their digicams to understand what buttons they're pressing.
Besides accidental deletion, there's also camera loss. Who among us has not set the camera down someplace and walked off without it? Certainly not I; I once left my $600 worth of Canon Rebel G and Sigma 28-200 lens hanging from a chair in the bakery at the front of IOA. Fortunately, a TM found it and it was waiting for me when my mind started working again. But what happens to those poor souls who lose their cameras permanently with a whole week's worth of WDW pics on the single 50 terrabyte memory card that they got on sale at Best Buy for $1.95 after 12 mail-in rebates? They lose their freakin' pics, that's what, and that's heartbreaking.
Then there's the age-old problem of camera malfunction. Yes, it's rare, but every so often a camera fails to operate after only 25 seconds in the water at POTC, or after suffering Decelleration Trauma when the kids knock it off the table at Crystal Palace, or after a good thorough cleaning (to get the Coke off it that you spilled in Pinochio Village Haus). Though rare, these things do sometimes occur, and if the memory card inside the camera shares the same fate, your pics can go the way of the dodo fast.
All of these horrible things that happen to cameras and memory cards can be prevented by exercising a little more caution, but even the best of us sometimes realize while riding Dr. Suess that our camera is no longer dangling from our shoulders where it should be, and when that does happen, we can take solace in the fact that only a small portion of our precious vacation pics are actually in the camera, while the rest are sitting safely back in our room safe on other memory cards or CDs.
Unless they're all on the camera, in which case we are, of course, royally screwed.
YMMV.