On those big trips, it's foolish not to have a test of all your
equipment and components.
He might have found the problem card a bit sooner.
And bring the wife along with a P&S digital, as a failsafe.
Regards,  Bob S.

On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 1:31 PM, P. J. Alling
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Losing cards is a problem but a card can also becoming non functional, I've
> had a few physically fall apart making them unusable, but I was able to
> recover the data from them. However as a cautionary tail a friend of mine,
> went on a once in a lifetime vacation to southern Africa, intending to do a
> lot of wildlife shooting. He brought enough SD cards to take several,
> thousand photos, without having to download them to a computer, he doesn't
> have a laptop, (shooting JPEG, he doesn't shoot raw), He filled up four
> cards. When he returned I got a call for help, one of his cards couldn't be
> read by his computer. I suggested a number of different recovery programs.
> The third one finally was able to recover data from the card. All of the
> downloaded files were corrupted. I took a look at it and nothing I tried was
> able to do better. If you have everything on one card and that card goes
> south, you loose everything.
>
> On 1/31/2013 9:57 AM, Stan Halpin wrote:
>>
>> On Jan 31, 2013, at 7:30 AM, Matthew Hunt wrote:
>>
>>> On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 1:59 AM, Bipin Gupta <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello Bruce and PDMLer Friends, That is the question: why buy 16 GB
>>>> Cards when you can't fill it up in a shoot??
>>>
>>> 1) I don't like to delete files from cards during a vacation, even
>>> after I've copied them to the laptop. So larger cards mean fewer cards
>>> to store, switching less often, etc. Since I back up to the laptop
>>> daily, I'm not too worried about losing more than a day's photos at
>>> once, which is one of the most common objections to large cards.
>>> ...
>>
>> Ditto.
>>
>>
>> People have mentioned a concern with "losing" cards as a reason to go with
>> smaller cards, thereby minimizing the quantity of images that might be lost.
>> I have two thoughts about that. First, if it is a 32GB or 64GB card in the
>> camera and I almost certainly won't fill the card in one day of
>> vacation/travel shooting, then the card stays in the camera all day. The
>> only way to lose it is to lose the camera. If it is a smaller capacity card
>> that I need to swap out during the day, then there would be more chance of
>> physically losing or damaging the card during or after a card swap. The
>> second kind of "lose" of images could be from a failure of the SD card
>> itself. Again, I assume that less handling of the cards will reduce the
>> chance of causing damage to the cards, and again the strategy of "big card,
>> don't swap" makes sense to me.
>>
>> stan
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Buy a Leica to get the full “Leica Experience”, (a quick reduction of funds
> in the bank account).
>
>
>
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