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Apple Photos app corrupts images

(tenderlovemaking.com)
1119 points pattyj | 6 comments | | HN request time: 1.099s | source | bottom
1. yard2010 ◴[] No.45276988[source]
> Turns out “delete after import” was a huge mistake.

I learned the hard way to never delete photos from the SD. Just buy a new one it's so cheap anyway.

Great article by the way, sounds like my kind of rabbit hole :)

replies(1): >>45277384 #
2. anon1395 ◴[] No.45277384[source]
> Just buy a new one it's so cheap anyway

Not a good idea, you are going to have piles and piles of SD cards that will be hard to manage, and you will burn through $$$.

replies(2): >>45277869 #>>45277998 #
3. sgammon ◴[] No.45277869[source]
people have catalogued and tracked physical items for centuries without issue; a 1TB SD card is now $75 and can store perhaps a year worth of photos
4. thewebguyd ◴[] No.45277998[source]
I do the same (though not for personal photos, only for my professional wedding work). SD cards are small, I have a stack in a safe.

Every professional/paid client I shoot for, I do on new SD cards. I have dual slot cameras, so one card just permanently lives in my camera and gets formatted between shoots, the other I treat as a one-time use card.

Doesn't eat into my margin too much, and I appreciate the extra redundancy when dealing with someone else's wedding photos, so that if somehow something went catastrophically wrong with the rest of my back up process and off sites, at the very least I still have the SD card with the RAWs on it.

replies(1): >>45279196 #
5. dkga ◴[] No.45279196{3}[source]
Gosh I hoped all wedding photographers thought to do the same...
replies(1): >>45279664 #
6. thewebguyd ◴[] No.45279664{4}[source]
You'd be surprised. I've seen and heard some real horror stories.

My $dayjob is IT/infrastructure ops, so backup hygiene is engraved in me as a core value. A shocking amount of people outside of tech have no concept of backups or redundancy.