dcsang
Canadian & Not A Dentist
Hi folks,
Out of curiosity, those of you that have Olympus E-P2 cameras, what do your file numbers look like?
I've purchased one but I suspect that it's not "new" per se but a "returned" item and they clearly didn't (or at least I don't think they did) reset the file numbering system.
So those that have purchased new cameras, what number did your files start at? (i.e. PB000001.jpg/orf? PB100001.jpg/orf?)
Thanks,
Dave
Out of curiosity, those of you that have Olympus E-P2 cameras, what do your file numbers look like?
I've purchased one but I suspect that it's not "new" per se but a "returned" item and they clearly didn't (or at least I don't think they did) reset the file numbering system.
So those that have purchased new cameras, what number did your files start at? (i.e. PB000001.jpg/orf? PB100001.jpg/orf?)
Thanks,
Dave
HenryN
Member
I have had an EP-1 for over a year now and I remember my file numbering started at P100001 which I thought was strange at the time, but my camera was brand new without a doubt.
Henry
Henry
dcsang
Canadian & Not A Dentist
Durrrr
Found the info on page 107 of the instruction manual - it appears that the files are numbered with the month and date involved as well
Cheers,
Dave
Found the info on page 107 of the instruction manual - it appears that the files are numbered with the month and date involved as well
Cheers,
Dave
hub
Crazy French
I forgot to set the date on the camera. The first file was P1010001.ORF. Then the first file after I set the date is PB060004.ORF
Note: the file naming follow the DCIM convention specified in the standard that virtually all the manufacturer follow. It is as follow:
XXXXnnnn.EXT
XXXX is a four char prefix. Free form. Nikon use DSC_, Canon use IMG_ unless you use AdobeRGB in that case it is _MG_. It can be different for, for example, movies.
nnnn is a sequence number that is supposed to identify the shot in the series and to be incremented and unique in the folder. Which mean a maximum of 999 (or a 1000 items if they use 0000).
EXT is the extension. JPG, CR2, NEF, ORF, you name it.
Note: the file naming follow the DCIM convention specified in the standard that virtually all the manufacturer follow. It is as follow:
XXXXnnnn.EXT
XXXX is a four char prefix. Free form. Nikon use DSC_, Canon use IMG_ unless you use AdobeRGB in that case it is _MG_. It can be different for, for example, movies.
nnnn is a sequence number that is supposed to identify the shot in the series and to be incremented and unique in the folder. Which mean a maximum of 999 (or a 1000 items if they use 0000).
EXT is the extension. JPG, CR2, NEF, ORF, you name it.
Last edited:
somecanuckchick
Tundra Gypsy
Hi folks,
Out of curiosity, those of you that have Olympus E-P2 cameras, what do your file numbers look like?
I've purchased one but I suspect that it's not "new" per se but a "returned" item and they clearly didn't (or at least I don't think they did) reset the file numbering system.
So those that have purchased new cameras, what number did your files start at? (i.e. PB000001.jpg/orf? PB100001.jpg/orf?)
Thanks,
Dave
PB100001.jpg/orf
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