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How Do You Manage Your SD Card Library?

txmadman writes "Like a lot of my colleagues and all of my three children, I have several SD , mini-SD, and micro-SD cards for various purposes: cameras, cell phones, my laptop, etc. These things are handy to have around, offer easy and significant storage, but are very easily lost. We have also have run into some instances where it wasn't clear whose SD card was whose, and have also started to see a need for a storage mechanism. I have seen SD card 'wallets' and such, but have never seen anyone actually use one. So: How do you manage and keep track of your SD cards?"

3 of 485 comments (clear)

  1. Labels by FluffyWithTeeth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Put labels on them and keep them in a credit card pocket of your wallet.

    This is seriously not a difficult enough problem to warrant a /. story..

    1. Re:Labels by rm999 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Having 100s of memory cards around makes about as much sense as having 100s of rolls of used, unlabeled film laying around. Even if your uncle is taking 20 megapixel RAW pictures, he can fit 800 pictures on eight 2-gig cards. In this extreme example, he shouldn't need more than eight cards if he takes 800 pictures a shoot, because the first thing he should do when his shoot is over is empty the pictures onto a hard drive with an automatic backup, then format the cards.

      If you are having trouble organizing your memory cards, you can probably simplify some other aspect of your life to fix the problem.

    2. Re:Labels by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      no, you would need at least 16 cards, but likely more. much more.

      800 shots per job is not an overestimate, it is actually a very reasonable number.

      I use one set of cards for each particular job. each set of cards is numbered and lettered. (1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, 2a, 2b, 2c ...etc.)
      for one job, i use my '1x' set, while the next job, i use my '2x' set.

      use a sharpie, never pencil, to label your cards. different colours can help, too.

      I copy the images to a properly named folder on a hard drive at the end of the night, and put those memory cards into a clearly labeled box. (I use an Altoids tin with some padding material thrown in)
      at the start of the next day, I insert the next set of cards into my camera bag for the next job.

      you ONLY format those cards and re-use them after the job is complete. before then, a minimum of 2 copies of the data must be kept. even after the job is complete, i keep the data on the cards until i need to format them for another job.

      A professional has no excuse for lost data. but even at the amateur level, you don't want to lose your data. those photos could become treasured memories for generations to come.

      --
      -I only code in BASIC.-