Andy K
Well-known
fgianni said:Ok here is my workflow:
1) If shot with film I scan it immediately.
2) Then I have a database of images managed by Imach, every new picture is added to the database, the files themselves are kept on an external HD, so should my computer crash I don't have problems getting at the images.
3) as soon as the picture is in the database, and indexed, a directory containing all my images in yet another external HD is syncronized (it takes only seconds) to gether with the database files (to back up the indexing as well)
4) Only at this point the image is deleted from the memory card.
The whole back-up process takes a couple of minutes
So as soon as I get back to my PC all my images are stored in two separate external drives. On top of that a set of DVDs with all the images is produced on a by-monthly basis and sent off site for storage (to my mother in law), so even a fire can't destroy all my pictures, can anyone say the same for negatives?
As soon as an external drive becomes too small, it is replaced by a bigger one (my guess is an HD upgrade every 2 years)
I can suffer a catastrophic failure of one external drive without losing any image (and a catastrophic failure is extremely unlikely since there are data-recovery companies that can recover 99% of the data from HD that have been trough a fire)
I can suffer a catastrophic failure of two HD (if someone wants to try and calculate the probablility of it be my guest, but it is going to be less than 1/1000000000) losing only 2 months of family memories at most.
Can your negatives go trough a fire and survive?
That sounds very expensive and slow. Yes my negs will survive a fire. I keep them in a fireproof file storage box, similar to this.