Well, I don't use online storage since it would take a lot of time to transfer them. If that problem would be tackled I might consider. Up till now I just made DVD copies and stored them at my parents' place.DJdeRidder wrote:Does anyone here use online storage to back up your photos? Or is there another way to backup your photos to a safe location? Any recommendations or tips are welcome..
Lol, surely you have seen too many spie movies lately Iwan. It's an original thought though. You might consider using the Railway time table booklet for that.Iwan Bogels wrote: and if you're afaid that it could be stolen, you can even hide it in a regular book. Just cut out space in the middle pages. Fortunately I don't have to do that myself, but it's just a thought.
Iwan
I use a Freecom Toughdisk for this, copy them from the Laptop right upon coming "home", and I never leave the hotel without it....let the hotel burn, I'll always have the piccies with me that way! These toughdisks are "hufterproof" and small...Iwan Bogels wrote:Hi DJ,
For on-trip storage I use a LaCie mobile disk (http://www.lacie.com/nl/products/product.htm?pid=11256" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;) which only needs a USB connection for its power. After a day out I download all files to my laptop (first back-up) and then copy it to the extremely compact LaCie disk (second back-up).
Cheers,
Iwan
GROTE GRIJNS !Rene Klok wrote:You might consider using the Railway time table booklet for that.
I could have guessed you travel with those yellow tube shaped things a lot Iwan.Iwan Bogels wrote:GROTE GRIJNS !Rene Klok wrote:You might consider using the Railway time table booklet for that.
What do you use ? I'll bet the BP-spaarzegel-boekje is a bit too thin....?!
Cheers,
Iwan
Depends; do you want to do a full backup of all files (photos) each time, or incremental (just the new & changed ones), what speed is your internet access, and that of the storage provider, and do you only want to upload it from home, or also on the road (from an internet cafe and such).SquAdmin wrote:Well, I don't use online storage since it would take a lot of time to transfer them.
yep, but you can first 'rar' or '7-zip' it, using a password. Encryption of both is pretty strong (with 7z having the better).DG AIR wrote:I have been thinking on online storage as well but I am a bit scary about the safety. They can hack almost anything nowadays.
Probably just incremental, but after one airshow you could easily end up with xxGb of files. It takes pretty long to upload that to an online service, even if there is a high speed connection between both ends. Downloading in case of dataloss takes even longer because then you have to download the hundreds of Gb's at once... I think I'll just stick to physical archiving until this whole cloud storage thing has maturedHans wrote:Depends; do you want to do a full backup of all files (photos) each time, or incremental (just the new & changed ones), what speed is your internet access, and that of the storage provider, and do you only want to upload it from home, or also on the road (from an internet cafe and such).
How did you do that?Polecat wrote:Even in the old Kodachrome days I used to keep a 'shadow collection.
Which is an important question. I bet you can access the Google account from everywhere, but some providers do not allow that. KPN does not for example (unless they changed recently), in fact, when I tested it, you couldn´t even restore your files to another computer if your original one crashed. It used a key that was stored on your PC and if that key was gone.....Hans wrote:and do you only want to upload it from home, or also on the road (from an internet cafe and such).
There is a simple solution: I have a network drive (NAS) at home connected to the internet via my router which I can access from anywhere in the world. On the road with my own notebook I can upload my photos using FTP to this network drive which can be fast depending on the local internet connection.ehusmann wrote:Which is an important question. I bet you can access the Google account from everywhere, but some providers do not allow that. KPN does not for example (unless they changed recently), in fact, when I tested it, you couldn´t even restore your files to another computer if your original one crashed. It used a key that was stored on your PC and if that key was gone.....Hans wrote:and do you only want to upload it from home, or also on the road (from an internet cafe and such).
Erwin
As a member you get access to all our
premium content and benefits learn more