Travel storage
#41
Posted 23 September 2005 - 08:30 AM
James
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
#43
Posted 23 September 2005 - 09:08 AM
Epson Japan has today announced an upgrade to the image viewer P-2000 which doubles the capacity. The P-4000, features a larger 80GB hard disk, 3.5-inch LCD and new higher powered 2600mAh battery, compared to the 2300mAh battery in the P-2000. The device can display JPEG files as well as RAW images from the Epson RD-1 and also play MPEG-4 movies at 640 x 480 pixels. The P-4000 also has slots for CompactFlash Type 2 and SD cards. The expected retail price in Japan is around ¥70,000 (approx $629). More information as we receive it. FROM DPREVIEW
D300, D200, D70, 12-24 f4 AFS DX, 60mm f2.8, 70-200 f2.8 AF-S VR, 105 f2.8 AF-S VR, Tokina Wunderlens.
Photo galleries @ Ruaux.net
#44
Posted 23 September 2005 - 11:55 AM
...What drives fail the least? I always get the same answer, IBM drives...
I've had four IBM laptops, and never had any trouble with their HDs. OTOH, I can't say the same about IBM MICROdrives.
www.UnderwaterReflections.com
Canon 5DMkII in Aquatica, 1DsMkII in Seacam, G9 in OEM...Inon Z240's...too many lenses
"If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Then quit. No use being a damned fool about it." WC Fields
#45
Posted 23 September 2005 - 02:04 PM
Does IBM still make drives?
James
Hitachi bought IBM's hard drive division in 2002. The two IBM 120G Deskstar drives in my 2002 Mac have worked fine. If I needed to, I could replace them with Hitachi Deskstars.
http://www.geek.com/...20605012041.htm
I bought a third drive a few months ago, a Seagate 200G. It's failed already. Luckily it gave me some warning so I was able to back up my recent work. If only I'd backed up my hard drive purchase receipt!
My new strategy is to create a new external clone of my main drive and update it on a weekly basis. I'll also keep my receipt in a safe place.
-Brad
#46
Posted 23 September 2005 - 04:08 PM
Type in "IBM Deathstar" into Google and you'll see how they earned this name - there were a lot of problems reported with certain models on the reliability front (mainly the earlier 75 GXP models - of which I owned and lost 2 within a few weeks of each other). Still I think they are good drives on the whole, but I always work on the assumption that any of my drives could pack up any day (who said I was a pessimist?). I also tend to buy from different manufacterers, as buying a wad of the earlier deskstars didn't leave me with much confidence when I found out I was one of many people who'd had reliability problems with them.
Steve
#47
Posted 24 September 2005 - 07:37 AM
Michel
PS: Much shorter post this time...
#48
Posted 24 September 2005 - 09:24 AM
Never had problems with external USB and firewire drives. Only one time, when I did not stop the drive before disconnecting and write cache was enabled.
Julian
#49
Posted 15 October 2005 - 07:19 AM
#50
Posted 17 September 2006 - 03:56 PM
I saw during my search that there are a few out there using them, but didn't get a sense as to if they are well liked.
Would users please offer up a few opinions?
thanks!
John
#51
Posted 06 October 2006 - 10:15 AM
You can change the hard drive youself, mine came with a 40gig, but I will probably upgrade to an 80 or 100 soon..
The only disadvantage is that you cannot view your pics.
A friend of mine recently took his FlashTrax XT to the Red sea, but I must still find out how well this worked. With the FlashTrax you can also view your pictures.
#52
Posted 01 December 2006 - 04:59 AM
I'd like to share my thought process on my recent storage upgrade. It seems to me that the plummeting prices for CF have changed the rules.
A query: you can now get (what seems so far) a very reliable, fast 4GB 150X nominal card for about $70 (Ridata at Newegg). For the cost of an HD backup device, you can get 2-8 of these puppies. Do you really want to spend your money on something you can't shoot to, instead?
To me, the low CF price means the HD devices are needed only for backup or viewing (where they support that). I can get 700+ raw (D70 compresssed NEF) on a 4GB card. That's 20 rolls. I have three 4GB cards (plus an older 2 and 1), so that's 60+ rolls -- really, more, as I do delete the junk as I go. Of course, bigger sensors need more cards, but it's still pretty cheap (and you boys with bigger sensors must have bigger bucks, and err other things, right?).
So, about backup. I'm not at all convinced the HD devices are *as good as* the CF cards. Those guys are tough: one of mine survived a flooding wiith all images intact. Try that with a hard drive! I know one's not guaranteed to recover images in this case, but fortunately floods are very rare and lost images would really be the least of my worries in this case. But I be not pro. Anyway, comments on CF and HD reliability and recovery? Also, why this mania for backup now, when we never had it before?
(I think it's a bit of invasion of the nerds, and also speculate that more images have been lost when people *thought* they'd been backed up externally, than have been lost by damaged CF cards. Comments?)
On viewing: the LCD's are now much better than my D70, and are probably good enough for quick culling. So does one really need the viewer?
I was considering getting a HD backup for my next trip (old one died, reinforcing my point on reliability), but this thought process made me buy the 2 4GB cards instead. If I really need backup or viewing, I can take my laptop. For me, the standalone storage seems like a relatively expensive, unreliable, and unnessecary intermediate. More CF is cheaper, more useful, and much more compact. For me, the standalone backup has gone the way of the old microdrive cards -- a relic of expensive flash memory.
Comments?
All the best,
Chris
Edited by CeeDave, 03 December 2006 - 10:13 AM.
Subal ND70 + 2X DS125 ... mostly 10.5, 16, and 60
#53
Posted 15 April 2008 - 01:19 AM

Its a old model, and sometimes you can find one in ebay about 650$
Microsoft Windows XP Professional (Tablet Edition)
1GHz Transmeta Crusoe Processor
30GB hard drive
512MB DDR RAM
800 x 480 W-VGA 5" transflective display (indoor/outdoor readable)
3D accelerated graphics with 8MB of video RAM
Wireless & Bluetooth
FireWire & USB 2.0 ports
Dimensions: 4.9" x 3.4" x 0.9"
Weight: 14 ounces
You can carry it in your jacket pocket
It would never remain obsolete
You will be able to update raw plugins ever
You can install linux SO
I install Adobe Lightroom and works fine!
#54
Posted 15 April 2008 - 06:23 AM
Otherwise, very cool indeed.
I'm still using the Jobo giga vu pro evolution which has a big hard drive and a decent screen.
Cheers
James
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
#55
Posted 15 April 2008 - 06:55 AM
Stu
www.stewartsy.com
SLS Photography, when your images matter....
Aquatica, Amphibico, TLC, ULCS (Philippines), Stix, iTorch, Magic Filter Dealer
Philippine Dive Trip Specialist
#56
Posted 15 April 2008 - 07:35 AM
That looks like a great device at a great price! The only difference I can see between the Color Space and the Jobo is that the Jobo can act as a wireless FTP server - which is good for event shooting, but not much use on a boat lol.
Cheers
James
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
#57
Posted 15 April 2008 - 11:02 AM
Yeah, but only 30 gigs of storage? That is not enough - I can fill that after shooting through two of my memory cards :-(
Yes, is not the bigger HD... but you can attach and small external HD (USB or Firewire) or change the internal disk...
320Gb is enoug?
Western Digital Passport
Edited by nachogil, 15 April 2008 - 11:08 AM.
#58
Posted 15 April 2008 - 11:11 AM
FTP server - which is good for event shooting, but not much use on a boat lol.
Cheers
James
Welll if it is a really BIG boat it may be worhtwhile
But the Hyperdrive looks VERY cool.
I bought the bare unit and put in my own 160GB Samsung drive.
Stu
Stu, easy to put into this?
#59
Posted 15 April 2008 - 02:54 PM
Welll if it is a really BIG boat it may be worhtwhile
But the Hyperdrive looks VERY cool.
Stu, easy to put into this?
Drew,
Yes, very easy to do, on board firmware will format drive for you and has built in image recovery. I figure if I fill up the drive, I'll just swap it out with an empty one and place the old one in a plain external USB case for 10 bucks.
Highly regarded on Luminous Landscape. http://www.luminous-...yperdrive.shtml
Also, customer service from Hyperdrive in California was top notch. They bent over backwards to ensure I got the unit in time for my trip last Dec/January to Manila.
I ordered the extra battery holder for 4 AA's but never needed it.
Stu
Edited by scubastu, 15 April 2008 - 02:58 PM.
www.stewartsy.com
SLS Photography, when your images matter....
Aquatica, Amphibico, TLC, ULCS (Philippines), Stix, iTorch, Magic Filter Dealer
Philippine Dive Trip Specialist
#60
Posted 15 April 2008 - 03:47 PM
Drew,
Yes, very easy to do, on board firmware will format drive for you and has built in image recovery. I figure if I fill up the drive, I'll just swap it out with an empty one and place the old one in a plain external USB case for 10 bucks.
Highly regarded on Luminous Landscape. http://www.luminous-...yperdrive.shtml
Also, customer service from Hyperdrive in California was top notch. They bent over backwards to ensure I got the unit in time for my trip last Dec/January to Manila.
I ordered the extra battery holder for 4 AA's but never needed it.
Stu
Thanks for the info, just ordered one and a 160 Gig HD for it, this better work
