Re: comments on using an iPod to store photos

2005-12-06 Thread Godfrey DiGiorgi
 On Tuesday, December 06, 2005, at 11:46AM, Adam Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ... The only 
>downside I can think of is it doesn't play protected AAC audio files 
>(Songs purchased through iTunes).

Or lossless format. However, a workaround is to burn an audio CD with titles 
you want on the player, then rip them back into high-quality MP3 files. For the 
purposes of a portable music player, the losses involved are insignificant. 

Godfrey



Re: comments on using an iPod to store photos

2005-12-06 Thread Adam Maas

Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
The iPod is a music [video] player, not a standalone image storage  
device except for the most casual use.


An Epson P2000 plays music, perfoms video and image presentation on a  
nice big screen, allows preview inspection of both JPEG and RAW  format 
files, and will download 13-15 full 1G memory cards of images  per 
charge, at about 3 minutes download time per card. For $100 more  than 
the top of the line iPod, it's well worth it.


Godfrey


I second that. A good friend of mine uses the P2000 for his dive trips 
and loves it, I'm pretty impressed with the unit myself. The only 
downside I can think of is it doesn't play protected AAC audio files 
(Songs purchased through iTunes).


-Adam



Re: comments on using an iPod to store photos

2005-12-06 Thread Godfrey DiGiorgi
The iPod is a music [video] player, not a standalone image storage  
device except for the most casual use.


An Epson P2000 plays music, perfoms video and image presentation on a  
nice big screen, allows preview inspection of both JPEG and RAW  
format files, and will download 13-15 full 1G memory cards of images  
per charge, at about 3 minutes download time per card. For $100 more  
than the top of the line iPod, it's well worth it.


Godfrey



Re: comments on using an iPod to store photos

2005-12-06 Thread Bruce Dayton
At those transfer rates, using an IPod would be very painful and not
usable for me - I have events where the card needs to be used again in
10-15 minutes.  My CompactDrive transfers a gigabyte in a few minutes.
And it will transfer at least 10 gigabytes per battery charge.

Thanks for the report, it helps to know real world experiences with
equipment.  Seems the IPod would do in a pinch, but certainly not a
day in - day out device.

-- 
Best regards,
Bruce


Monday, December 5, 2005, 10:41:55 PM, you wrote:

JPS> As I just mentioned, I went to Kenya and Tanzania for a month...

JPS> The gear that I brought with me was:

JPS> Pentax *ist DS
JPS> 2 1G SD cards
JPS> Many AA rechargeables, 2 sets of disposable CRV3s
JPS> A-50 f1.4
JPS> Tamron 70-300
JPS> 18-55
JPS> 30G iPod video

JPS> The iPod worked well enough, but it has 2 fatal flaws
JPS> 1 - the battery is only good for writing about 800MB.. and that takes
JPS> about 30 minutes.  Still, with car and universal chargers, and 2 SD
JPS> cards, I could shoot all day and transfer to the iPod at night.
JPS> 2 - you have to transfer an entire roll of photos, then immediately
JPS> delete them from the card.  The iPod isn't smart enough to know that it
JPS> is already storing a photo.

JPS> The damn thing scared the crap out of me on a few occaisions (when wall
JPS> power was bad, temperature was high, or ?) by either crashing, claiming
JPS> that _it_ held no photos, or claiming that the camera was empty. 
JPS> Resetting the iPod and/or allowing it to cool fixed the problem every
JPS> time, but the first couple times this happened I was a little tense.

JPS> I was concerned that the camera's battery would be run down by 
JPS> transferring directly from the camera to the iPod, but with AA 
JPS> rechargables, it wasn't really an issue.

JPS> Would I recommend using an iPod for a similar trip?  Maybe, but an
JPS> external battery with a dock connector, camera connector or card reader
JPS> would be preferable to the apple iPod Camera Connector.
 
JPS> 
http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/AppleStore?productLearnMore=M9861G/A

JPS> JP



comments on using an iPod to store photos

2005-12-05 Thread Jon Paul Schelter

As I just mentioned, I went to Kenya and Tanzania for a month...

The gear that I brought with me was:

Pentax *ist DS
2 1G SD cards
Many AA rechargeables, 2 sets of disposable CRV3s
A-50 f1.4
Tamron 70-300
18-55
30G iPod video

The iPod worked well enough, but it has 2 fatal flaws
1 - the battery is only good for writing about 800MB.. and that takes 
about 30 minutes.  Still, with car and universal chargers, and 2 SD 
cards, I could shoot all day and transfer to the iPod at night.
2 - you have to transfer an entire roll of photos, then immediately 
delete them from the card.  The iPod isn't smart enough to know that it 
is already storing a photo.


The damn thing scared the crap out of me on a few occaisions (when wall 
power was bad, temperature was high, or ?) by either crashing, claiming 
that _it_ held no photos, or claiming that the camera was empty. 
Resetting the iPod and/or allowing it to cool fixed the problem every 
time, but the first couple times this happened I was a little tense.


I was concerned that the camera's battery would be run down by 
transferring directly from the camera to the iPod, but with AA 
rechargables, it wasn't really an issue.


Would I recommend using an iPod for a similar trip?  Maybe, but an 
external battery with a dock connector, camera connector or card reader 
would be preferable to the apple iPod Camera Connector.


http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/AppleStore?productLearnMore=M9861G/A

JP