Most active commenters

    ←back to thread

    Apple Photos app corrupts images

    (tenderlovemaking.com)
    1119 points pattyj | 11 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source | bottom
    1. doodaddy ◴[] No.45275721[source]
    As an Olympus shooter this is good to know.

    But good gravy that troubleshooting path got expensive real fast. Replacing the laptop and the camera? Why not start by trying something other than Photos? It doesn’t even need to be a paid product; the Olympus software is free not to mention a good baseline since it - of all the applications - should be able to import photos without corrupting them.

    Edit to add: delete on import seems pretty risky. My workflow is to import and only delete from the camera after 1) the imported photos are backed up 2) I’ve done a first pass culling.

    replies(7): >>45276373 #>>45276429 #>>45276712 #>>45279009 #>>45279195 #>>45280213 #>>45283739 #
    2. JKCalhoun ◴[] No.45276373[source]
    I too sometimes use troubleshooting as an excuse to get new hardware I had been meaning to upgrade to.
    3. GuinansEyebrows ◴[] No.45276429[source]
    My first thought was “software troubleshooting is a lot cheaper than hardware troubleshooting!” Maybe the author isn’t bound by the same economic realities as some of us are accustomed to.
    4. in_cahoots ◴[] No.45276712[source]
    Yeah, after you've had this problem once it seems you'd uncheck delete after import before buying a literally entirely new photography system.
    replies(2): >>45277127 #>>45282007 #
    5. PaulHoule ◴[] No.45277127[source]
    My workflow is don't delete after import but format the card in the camera afterwards. I have XXXL cards and it is not such a problem if I forget to format.

    I had one case where I screwed up a shoot and thought file corruption might have been involved (it wasn't) Even though I had formatted the card with the camera and shot maybe 5 test shots I was able to recover most of the images with Disk Drill

    https://www.cleverfiles.com/data-recovery-software.html

    which has both Windows and Mac versions and looking at a sample of them confirmed it wasn't corruption, it was user error.

    replies(2): >>45277516 #>>45281278 #
    6. burnte ◴[] No.45279009[source]
    Agreed. Proper troubleshooting technique takes into account not just just swapping out parts, but looking at likelihood and cost. Changing software is highly likely to solve the issue as well as being free and fast to check.
    7. doctorpangloss ◴[] No.45279195[source]
    This is why Apple makes so much fucking money. Because Photos (non-compatibility with anything else) is the moat.
    8. softfalcon ◴[] No.45280213[source]
    As a photographer, I agree. Make multiple copies of the files onto the main editing computer, followed by then also backing up direct from SD to the NAS. Never format or delete your cards (the originals) before you are dead sure you have several backups visibly uncorrupted.

    I may be paranoid because I used to handle footage for VFX pipelines and you just do not mess around with those kinds of files. If you lose footage, you are in big trouble.

    9. eichin ◴[] No.45281278{3}[source]
    (for media files, the linux tool of choice is PhotoRec, sometimes packaged as part of testdisk)
    10. philsnow ◴[] No.45282007[source]
    Or just treat the SD cards as write-once and keep buying new ones
    11. vitaflo ◴[] No.45283739[source]
    Or stop using the camera to connect to the Mac and just take out the SD card and use a reader like most other photographers do.