Sure...I have photographed many Olympics over the past decade, but with technology changes, this is something I have to rethink each time the Games come around. The good news is that with all the high-tech wizardry out there, this process get easier and more powerful every couple of years.
Photo credit: Nick Didlick |
Capturing the photos
I will be shooting almost exclusively using Canon 1D X MKII cameras, outfitted with 3500x CFast memory cards. This will allow me to shoot images and have them clear the buffer quickly so that I am never waiting for the camera to offload files and missing shots. But more importantly, they let me download really fast to my MacBook Pro 15" laptop. Having a 15 minute deadline for getting images back to the US, means that every second counts.
Photo credit: Vitor Manes |
Local storing of the photos
Once I have captured the photos, it is really important for me to store them in not just one safe place, but many. When I edit at my main computer back in California, I have a Drobo 5D3 RAID system filled with 32TB of Western Digital hard drives. This is my main drive from which I work directly. But the unit is not portable and not something I take with me when I travel. So I am working from the SSD of the laptop. The problem is, the SSD on my MacBook Pro is only 1TB, so I can only hold a couple of days photos on the internal drive without running out of room. I plan on backing up the images to numerous portable SSD units in Korea.
Remote storage of the photos
This year I have a new and exciting system in place which will give me more peace of mind than ever before.
Along with my Drobo 5D3, I also have upgraded to a Drobo 810n networked RAID system. What is really cool about this box, is that I can access it from anywhere in the world. Even though the Drobo 810n is sitting in California, I can copy my Olympic images to it from half way around the world. And I can also access any of my photos from Korea, so if a someone orders a print, I can upload the RAW file while in PyeongChang, retouch the photo and send it to Bay Photo for printing. I had similar capabilities during the last Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, but this year adds something even cooler!
About 6 months ago, I got a second Drobo 810n. At this point, you might be wondering why I would want two of these units. Well...I wanted complete redundancy and I wanted it offsite. I copied all the files from my first 810n to the second unit, which is every digital image I have ever taken! I then took the second 810n to a friends house and connected it to their home router. I set up DroboDR (free software that comes with the 810n) on both units and now they synchronize every night starting at 11pm.
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With temps like that, don't forget the extra batteries.
ReplyDeleteDrobo sounds amazing! Hopefully next year I'll get on a NAS system. I especially love being able to access any picture from anywhere in the world! I'm always searching through my dropbox hoping that I left a client's page still up...
ReplyDeleteJeff, can't wait to follow your exploits in Korea. Have been following your Olympic adventures for years. also Bay Area guy. I, too, own several Drobos. Questions.... what speed connection do you get in Korea... inconceivable to me uploading thousands of giant files over hotel wifi. Also, love your offsite storage solution... again who's your ISP, cuz comcast would never let me use that much bandwidth to duplicate terabytes of data over my home internet service...with images at over 50MB each, they would shut me down almost immediately.
ReplyDeleteTravel Safe. Stay Warm.
Hi Jeff, I'm curious to know if all your photos will be in RAW format, or do you store other formats also? So then I wondered how much storage space do you think this will all take, given that it is 50,000 photos at ??MB (average) per photo?! Thanks for the excellent blog.
ReplyDeleteI shoot everything at full RAW. And I am not going to upload using hotel WiFi. I will be using the Olympic press Internet connection which should be fast enough to pull this off. :)
ReplyDelete