Vince Lupo
Whatever
My good friend, Sam Shoshan of Classic Connection, created a blog post of my recent travels to Arizona and New Mexico, as well as a few pointers that might be of some help (admittedly, they're mostly pretty obvious!). All of the shots depicted have appeared here on the Forum.
Very much appreciated!!!
http://blog.classicconnection.com/2012/11/traveling-with-an-m9/
Very much appreciated!!!
http://blog.classicconnection.com/2012/11/traveling-with-an-m9/
Richard G
Veteran
Good advice. No regrets taking four lenses. Good to know. So small the M kit. Love the last two pictures, happy to see them again any time.
goo0h
Well-known
good read. thanks. now if only i could afford such a thing.
raid
Dad Photographer
Nicely done, Vince. In your opinion, no external drive is needed on a trip?
jky
Well-known
Nice!
Btw, I love that France church shot and how the lady mirrors the statue in its form.
Jc
Btw, I love that France church shot and how the lady mirrors the statue in its form.
Jc
Bingley
Veteran
I enjoyed the commentary, and most of all I enjoyed the photos! Thanks for the link!
Vince Lupo
Whatever
Nicely done, Vince. In your opinion, no external drive is needed on a trip?
No, I think I was able to get at least 250 shots per card, so over the course of 10 days there wasn't a need to reuse any of the cards. That's 1500 or so photos, after all!
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
But cards may fail or be stolen. It is good practice to back up each day and keep the backup medium (drive or laptop) in another place (like a hotel room safe) as the camera+cards.
Vince Lupo
Whatever
Same can happen with film -- you backing up your film too on vacation? Your hard drive could get stolen, and on and on and on (if my cards were somehow stolen on my trip, they'd have to get to them through my camera bag). I definitely can appreciate the suggestion to bring a backup hard drive, laptop etc, but then you're back to lugging a bunch of extra stuff on your vacation (and more stuff to worry about, fail, get stolen). I have to draw the line at some point, and that's my choice -- at least on vacation.
Richard G
Veteran
Same can happen with film -- you backing up your film too on vacation? Your hard drive could get stolen, and on and on and on (if my cards were somehow stolen on my trip, they'd have to get to them through my camera bag). I definitely can appreciate the suggestion to bring a backup hard drive, laptop etc, but then you're back to lugging a bunch of extra stuff on your vacation. I have to draw the line at some point, and that's my choice -- at least on vacation.
I agree. With airport rules and my aging neck and shoulders I only take my iPad now if I can possibly manage it. Taking care of the cards should be enough.
Lss
Well-known
The iPad is also a backup solution.I only take my iPad now if I can possibly manage it.
Vince Lupo
Whatever
How many gigs can an iPad store? If I have six 8GB cards, will it hold that much?
thegman
Veteran
If possible, I'd go for a online backup. I use Dropbox for just about everything, so if your hotel room has Wifi, you could use that.
Of course film cannot easily be backed up, for me, the easy duplication of digital files is a big string to digital's bow.
Of course film cannot easily be backed up, for me, the easy duplication of digital files is a big string to digital's bow.
Lss
Well-known
The top model will even if you have full cards, as long as you do not have that much other stuff on the iPad. The iPads come at 16, 32, and 64 GB.How many gigs can an iPad store? If I have six 8GB cards, will it hold that much?
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
If your hard drive gets stolen you have your cards left and vica versa.Same can happen with film -- you backing up your film too on vacation? Your hard drive could get stolen, and on and on and on (if my cards were somehow stolen on my trip, they'd have to get to them through my camera bag). I definitely can appreciate the suggestion to bring a backup hard drive, laptop etc, but then you're back to lugging a bunch of extra stuff on your vacation (and more stuff to worry about, fail, get stolen). I have to draw the line at some point, and that's my choice -- at least on vacation.
Offline storage is not always an option - you need a laptop and Internet.
I carry a Macbook Air 11". Small, handy and can do basic editing with the Photoshop app or Lightroom. My files go on a USB 500 Gb drive - very small and light - that my wife has in her bag, my full cards go in the room safe. And in my pocket when on the road. the rest in a smallish camera bag, including the Air.
Internal storage on an small Apple does not work for me - I came home with 132 Gb last trip.
Still, it beats 100 rolls of film in lead bags like I had in the past...
Richard G
Veteran
I don't know about the iPad for storage. Maybe the later ones are fast enough. I just have it for the things I used to take a laptop for. A colleague of mine managed a one week trip, checking email, editing a scientific paper and searching for the references on just an iPhone. Multiple cards in case one is corrupted is as far as I would go on a trip.
The Mac Air is small but one more expensive thing that weighs > 0g, and the requirement to present it to airport security separately just puts me off. I love putting everything through the X-ray in the bags I packed at home and walking through the arch to collect them. Neither my watch nor my belt nor my shoes set off the machines.
The Mac Air is small but one more expensive thing that weighs > 0g, and the requirement to present it to airport security separately just puts me off. I love putting everything through the X-ray in the bags I packed at home and walking through the arch to collect them. Neither my watch nor my belt nor my shoes set off the machines.
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
Well, as it just slips in and out of the side pocket of a camera bag I don't think the airport security argument is very strong. I usually have it out in airports anyway, as it doubles as a reader. I don't know about security your end of the world, but over here we are required to put belt,shoes and watches through the Xray regardless. I think they set off the bodyscanners.
raid
Dad Photographer
No, I think I was able to get at least 250 shots per card, so over the course of 10 days there wasn't a need to reuse any of the cards. That's 1500 or so photos, after all!
I am also leaning towards staying light during a trip. I may have to check my inventory of memory cards, and since I will be having my Ipad2 with me, I wonder what I need to be able to daily uploadd from the M9 to the internet. Is there a cable that I must bring with me to connect the M9 to the Ipad?
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
There is an USB adapter for the thing, and an SD card reader. Check the Apple Store.
I have to draw the line at some point, and that's my choice -- at least on vacation.
I have to agree too. I've had more hard drives fail than sd cards. When SD cards do fail, it is in camera and I've been able to recover the photos. They are small and cheap. Someone would really want to steal your SD cards to search them out (unless you leave them in your bag that gets stolen). Once the card is done or I deem it to be done, then I leave it elsewhere.
Share:
-
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.