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Vince Hawthorn Posts: 12758 Joined: 19th Apr 2010 Location: UK | quotePosted at 22:34 on 10th June 2012 A question for the technical, what is the reason that when reviewing pics on the camera occasionally screen is blank other than "file error" or "unable to display picture" and that pic is no longer able to be viewed again, However the pic will display on the computer when the sd card is put directly into the computer. Had this a few times now but not on the same camera and cards live in their own camera.The4 worst offender is the Samsung WB700 which does have a number of issues in it's workings. |
Dave John Posts: 22335 Joined: 27th Feb 2011 Location: England | quotePosted at 22:37 on 10th June 2012 Not sure on that one, will put it to my mate he might have some ideas |
Vince Hawthorn Posts: 12758 Joined: 19th Apr 2010 Location: UK | quotePosted at 22:39 on 10th June 2012 Thank you Dave. |
Dave John Posts: 22335 Joined: 27th Feb 2011 Location: England | quotePosted at 07:13 on 11th June 2012 Hi Vince My pal ain't too sure off the top of his head but will have a think on it. He's got plenty of time on his hands now since Jacobs closed 7 shops on Friday and his was one of them. The other 12 will no doubt follow soon.....victims of their own 'internet success' i suppose.....But as he also says, nowadays once you have bought your camera, lens and memory card, why do you need to set foot in the shop again????? You have every thing you need...rechargeable batteries, reusable card ! ! ! ! Anyway all I can think of at the minute is....do you just delete photos from your cards or do you reformat the card 'in camera'? When I have the images on the PC , via a card reader don't do it via camera, I put the card back into the camera and reformat. Also when I am out and have filled 1 card I put the next in and run the reformat again, only takes a few seconds. |
Paul Hilton Posts: 2605 Joined: 21st Nov 2004 Location: UK | quotePosted at 11:50 on 12th June 2012 I would hazard a guess there's a card fault and the camera/s can then not associate a file tag with the image connected with it so thinks there's no image there to display on some of them. As Dave said, don't delete/format cards on the PC and do it in-camera. When either happens, the images are still there but the camera can no longer read them so thinks/shows the card is empty and away you go again taking photos which are now over-writing images that are still actually there, not erased. I've noticed with Canon D-slrs, don't put a card from another Canon D-slr into one of yours--say a friend loans you a spare card from his. The file numbering will go up the spout when you go back to using one of your own cards----to find the image number is now continuing from your friends camera and won't go back to your numbering if his card's images were lower than yours. My Nikon cameras won't show images on a card that was taken with a Canon. My Canon d-slrs will show the images on a card that came from a Nikon. If you use the image number as a guide to shutter actuations, I find it best to keep the same card with the same camera and don't swap them about. My Nikons, bar the D1, will show actuations anyway on the metadata as does my Canon 1Ds MKII. My other Canons encode the actuations and will not readily appear as such in the metadata to easily read. All my cards are San Disk, top end range. When shooting a wedding, with dual card slots on the D3, each image is being written to two cards just in case one of the cards does fail; the 2nd card has the same images as a sort of back up, as well as spare cameras. Edited by: Paul Hilton at:12th June 2012 11:59 |
Vince Hawthorn Posts: 12758 Joined: 19th Apr 2010 Location: UK | quotePosted at 22:59 on 12th June 2012 Thanks Paul and Dave, still a puzzle to me. I keep each card for each camera and when it gets full up to now I start a fresh card( now my file sizes are getting bigger nowadays that might have to change) . images are loaded onto computer by putting card into sd slot on computer, not sure if that helps or not. |
Dave John Posts: 22335 Joined: 27th Feb 2011 Location: England | quotePosted at 23:10 on 12th June 2012 By the sounds of that then you don't delete or format cards, just use new ones?? In which case it does sound more along the lines of Paul's suggestion. Can't say that i recall it happening to me so far but you never know. You will certainly start amassing a collection of cards if you shoot RAW with the 550 cos i think you will be getting around 150 to a 4GB card. I get 170 with the 500! ! ! I have a dedicate hard disk in the PC for photos, that way they are kept away from the main operationg disk and so hopefully better safety from crashes etc |
Vince Hawthorn Posts: 12758 Joined: 19th Apr 2010 Location: UK | quotePosted at 23:30 on 12th June 2012 What have I let myself into? It was a lot more straightforward with a 8 mp kodak ! The only deleting is the obvious naff shots so they don't get onto the computer and take up disc space. For the time being I will stay with jpegs mostly cos of the time factor (but that could change), a while back I was never going to go digital , I was never going to get a computer and I would never ever have a mobile phone- funny how we change our minds. |
Dave John Posts: 22335 Joined: 27th Feb 2011 Location: England | quotePosted at 23:38 on 12th June 2012 Great minds and all that rot those were my thoughts exactly.....Digital would never take off.....don't need a computer cos i have one at work.....mobile phone, still hate the thing but necessary evil these days.If you are not into messing about with your images jpeg is ideal, the only thing with RAW is that you get so much more detail in the file but need software to convert them, Canons DPP which comes free in the package is more than adequate, although i have a copy of Photoshop CS4 passed on to me when my mate got CS5 (more money than sense that lad) Edited by: Dave John at:12th June 2012 23:39 |
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