I have an Epson P3000 "multimedia storage viewer". It reads CF and SD
cards, stores the images, allows one to preview and delete them, and
hooks up to a Mac or PC as an external drive.

It's 8 years old, though, so it's slow to read cards, it's heavy, and
the battery lasts for only about 2 hours of sorting (which seems short
on an airplane crossing the ocean).  Otherwise it works very nicely.

Rick
http://photo.net/photos/RickW


On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 9:46 AM, P.J. Alling <webstertwenty...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've thought about this since yesterday, if you're transferring the image
> files to reuse the SD cards then why not just carry enough SD cards to cover
> your expected shooting.  Good quality thumb drives seem to cost almost as
> much as good quality SD cards.  If you're actually doing a backup and
> carrying the thumb drives and keeping the images on the SD cards as well
> that's a different story, it matches your equipment.
>
> On 11/17/2014 5:20 PM, Mark Roberts wrote:
>>
>> On my last trip I did backup onto USB thumb drives. My Android tablet
>> has both an SD card slot and a USB port, so I just took the card out
>> of the camera and plugged it into the tablet, attached the USB thumb
>> drive and used the tablet to copy the files. Easy, simple and
>> lightweight.
>>
>
>
>
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