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uploading pix to storage

anon125
Explorer
Explorer
we want to try uploading a folder of pix - say 200 pix at 5MB each, to an online storage place. many times.
in the western states at least rest areas and RV parks have WIFI.
and we might get one of those things you stick into the USB on our old laptop (win7/64) from ATT or virgin that gives us internet on the road.
we don't have smart phones but we will get a gophone from at&t -
but that way of uploading would probably be very expensive.
which way is fastest?
does the storage site actually make any difference? Shutterfly? Adrive, flickr photobucket?
thanks all
PS not interested in sharing pixs at this point
PPS should I zip the files?
12 REPLIES 12

anon125
Explorer
Explorer
thanks Rob
I have had many discs fail, cds, DVDs and Blurays. while happily parked in there cases and never abused. yes thumb drives have failed also.
in a bouncing RV on WA roads that are like railroad ties....

anon125
Explorer
Explorer
http://www.virginmobileusa.com/mobile-broadband-plans/broadband-2-go/overview/
DATA WITH YOU, WHENEVER.
Take 4G data on the go. Sprint® 4G LTE Network. No Contract.
$25 a month means 1.5GB
but what does that mean?
I would like internet of course but if I use this to upload GBs of pictures....
will this be enough?
thanks, experts

rwbradley
Explorer
Explorer
Keep in mind if choosing offline storage, there are 3 main types: Optical, Mechanical and Flash
- Flash ie a thumb drive or SSD has a very short life (about 1000 writes but depends on quality/brand). The advantage is they are very fast, but I would strongly recommend against them for long term storage or heavy use unless you have a good 2nd copy. Don't expect a heavily used flash drive to last more than a couple of years. I have had failures at work around 1:100 range in the first year.
- Mechanical hard drives have a long history of being reliable, and it is not uncommon for drives to last 7-10 years of regular use. Portable hard drives like some of the models above are a good middle of the road storage. I have had failures around 1:10000 range in the first year.
- Optical storage like CD, DVD and Blueray have been tested to have real world shelf life measured in decades. They are slower and smaller but ideal for very long term storage. I have never in my life seen an optical disk fail if it tested fine after being burned except when scratched by the user.
Just remember if you are using it as a backup solution:
Two copies are one
and one copy is none
Rob
rvtechwithrvrob.com

anon125
Explorer
Explorer
Only about 10X faster. AHA!

apps - are they just for tablets and phones? I still use the old laptop.
free reliable encrypter?
thanks guys

1492
Moderator
Moderator
Just note that thumb(flash) drives may use less reliable memory. Manufacturers generally reserve their best for SSD, and the remaining for flash drives. Plus, always keep two copies of your photos and don't rely on any one source to store them, such as local drive+cloud storage or DVD/Bluray.

If you're concerned about photo ownership issues for online photo storage, than use cloud based file storage instead. Such as Dropbox, Google Drive, Microsoft One Drive, and encrypt them before upload. Therefore, they look just like a file on the cloud end, and only photos when decrypted on your end. There are a number of apps that will encrypt/decrypt folders on the fly for cloud storage.

camperpaul
Explorer
Explorer
anon125 wrote:

-- snip --
are these dongles? that you stick into the USB port for AT&T and virgin any faster than RVpark wifi?

Only about 10X faster.
Paul
Extra Class Ham Radio operator - K9ERG (since 1956)
Retired Electronics Engineer and Antenna Designer
Was a campground host at IBSP (2006-2010) - now retired.
Single - Full-timer
2005 Four Winds 29Q
2011 2500HD 6.0L GMC Denali (Gasser)

anon125
Explorer
Explorer
thanks all.
SSDs are too pricey so far and the old disc drive type with moving parts is now iffy. I am sure, like me you have used them in the past with no problems.
I have an account with 50GB available.
also 256gb thumb drives are worth looking at now the prices have fallen.
are these dongles? that you stick into the USB port for AT&T and virgin any faster than RVpark wifi?

DiskDoctr
Explorer
Explorer
If I could add to the OP's question...

Which sites do NOT lay claim to your photos or result in sharing more than you want? Ie. You want to share a few pics and the whole folder is shared.

accsys
Explorer
Explorer
Since you have no interest in sharing these photos, get a portable 2 terabyte hard drive like this one and you can store or backup about all you want there and not have to use WiFi at all. That 2 terabyte drive will hold 400,000 of your 5MB pictures!
John & Doris
Doris and Robbies Blogs
2017 Cedar Creek Cottage 40 CCK
FMCA F380583, PA, Good Sams

rwbradley
Explorer
Explorer
There are 2 ways of doing this, and the method will make a BIG difference.
One option is to use something like Onedrive, GoogleDrive, Dropbox or Box. In this scenario the photos will go up in their original size and as the above posts pointed out, it will take huge amounts of space (and extra space costs $$$), would be slow and likely unpractical for really large quantities. This is a better option for backing up the originals. Option 2 is to use a photo sharing service like Flickr (even Facebook does this). When you upload to most of these services, regardless of the original file size, they will resize the image to a predefined size, usually much much smaller than the original as for online viewing you do not need a massive gazillion megapixel image. This is a better option for sharing with friends/family.

If you are just trying to have a backup, I would opt for hitting a Bestbuy and getting a 1TB WD Passport portable Hard Drive for around $100 to copy them to, than you have all the space you could possibly need and no internet speed/ file size limitations.
Rob
rvtechwithrvrob.com

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
5mb per pic is a huge picture.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

fj12ryder
Explorer III
Explorer III
Well, 200 pix at 5MB each is 1 gig. You'll pretty much need your own internet source to do that since I would imagine the upload speed of free Wi-Fi is going to be pretty slow and would take a very long time. You could do a few at a time I suppose.

And I don't know what you mean by "many times". You want to upload the same folder many times?

You'll need to check on the storage capacity of each site depending on if you want free or if you're going to pay for storage.

If you're archiving .jpg's then they're already compressed so zipping them won't do much.
Howard and Peggy

"Don't Panic"