Avoid Camera Memory Stick Disasters!
Today’s story is about the memory stick of your camera.
The raw format can eat up the camera’s memory quickly and is necessary for us to be able to store all the information needed to edit the images in the future. Also, since we’re all shooting with RAW format (you shoot using raw formats, aren’t you? ), With our camera’s memory sticks, we require the most memory we can.
One tip is to make the most memory you can.
Why would you risk the possibility of a failed memory stick during an actual shoot? They are prone to failure or even break. If you are looking for a brand replacement memory stick, choose the best quality and backups! They’ll last longer and perform better work. The price of the top-of-the-line camera memory stick isn’t as high as the cheapest one. And it’ll be able to pay for itself time and time again!
The second tip is to purchase the top memory sticks – buy many.
When we were in the beginning of time (film) as we traveled, we were required to climb through a variety of hurdles to prevent our film from passing through the machines that X-Ray.
We had to have it checked manually, and all the people in front of us in line gave us dirty stares and let us know that if they came across us in a dark street, it would not be pleasant!
Sincerely, I have never met anyone who was ruined their film due to an X-Ray device, and I’m tempted by the idea that it was just only “urban fiction.”
However, in order to protect ourselves, we had to go through it regardless.
I can assure you that the memory stick will not be affected by X-Rays, and that is a significant concern to the take-off of the list.
But…as previously mentioned, it is possible for them to “fail” or become damaged, and you lose everything you’ve shot. You’ve spent thousands on your dream trip and don’t have any photos to prove it! Perhaps you even shot the wedding of a close friend who will not remain a close friend for much longer.
The most important word is BACKUP! As soon as you can, you can download your images onto your computer, when it’s possible. If not, head to any film or camera store, and they’ll create the CD for you.
In fact, it is a good idea to backup your CDs. It is a great idea, even if the images are already on your computer. Computers can fail, and they may create years of images with them. It’s not about the likelihood that your computer will fail. However, it’s about what happens when.
Furthermore, pictures can consume your computer memory in a flash. If you save your old images on a CD, you have access to them without consuming the entire memory of your computer. Additionally, the fact that you’ll have fewer photos will let your computer be more efficient too!
The third tip is to regularly – and always backup the memory sticks of your cameras as well as computer-generated photo files to the CD.
I’m hoping these three easy camera memory stick tips ultimately save you from catastrophe. They have saved me!
For more details, look up the resources box.