I feel exactly the same way. I even take an external 2,5" hard drive with me for double back up.Alpha Kilo One wrote:I used an image tank, but I never really was friends with it. For me a laptop works fine. Gives me other"desired" features as well.
Same here Mo. A laptop and external 2,5" hard drive. Next to that I wait as long as possible to format my memory cards, so they can act as extra back-up.Maurice wrote:I feel exactly the same way. I even take an external 2,5" hard drive with me for double back up.Alpha Kilo One wrote:I used an image tank, but I never really was friends with it. For me a laptop works fine. Gives me other"desired" features as well.
I get your point, but times have changed. A laptop with Windows installed on a solid state disk will take a split second to fire up and with a built in card reader + automated copy/synchronization job it won't require a lot of effort.Joe Kurr wrote:It works, but I rather have a dedicated imagetank than a netbook / laptop, because an imagetank is much easier to use when taking pictures.
With a laptop, I have to start up Windows, plug in a card reader, insert my CF card, open Explorer, browse to the CF card, copy, browse to the desired target folder, paste.
Same goes for me. These days I have 100+ Gb of memory cards (my camera takes CF + SD), so it's virtually impossible to fill this up in one day. After a day of shooting I either go home and download there, or I do it in my hotel room. It's much more relaxing than doing it in the field.SquAdmin wrote:Personally, I would never backup pictures in the field but in my hotel room. Using a laptop I have much more control over things and it offers me plenty of other advantages.
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