Feb
29

Are DVDs Dead? (for Lightroom photo backup purposes that is)

Just curious… anyone using DVDs to backup their photos still? Some one asked me the other day how they should name their backup photo DVDs so that they’re easy to find later on in Lightroom. Honestly, it’s been YEARS since I’ve used a DVD to backup photos. The average DVD holds 4.7 Gigabytes per layer. Sure there’s different kind of DVDs but for the most part, you’re looking around 4 GB. So if you shoot with a 16 GB card (and fill it up), you’d need 4 DVDs just to back up that one card. If you’re shooting with a 32GB card (which I am), you’d need almost 8 DVDs. To me, it just doesn’t seem like a feasible backup solution any more. You can buy 1 TB external drives for under $150 now. That would be around 215 DVDs worth of storage. So you could even buy two of them to make sure you have two backups of your photos (something I rarely hear people who backup to DVDs do).

Are you still using DVDs to backup your photos? If so, why?

9 Comments to “Are DVDs Dead? (for Lightroom photo backup purposes that is)”

  • Yes I still do. I do just in case of a catastrophic failure or corruption to something not known yet. But I don’t back up everything to DVD. Only those photos that are edited as the best from a shoot, and the jpegs of those along with all post work (usually saved as PSD ) wich could save me loads of work later. I also save to DVD any templates I create in PS as well as my actions,brushes,swatches ect.. So in the event of a major crash I can be up and running after a reinstall of photoshop.

  • Yes, I still do. I follow the 3-2-1 backup rule, with one copy on DVDs (so, offline) dislocated offsite. In this way, I repair my data from theft and natural disasters :)

  • Hi Matt,

    Nope, after my major crash about a month ago, I decided it was time to move up to the big time! :-) I purchased a 4 bay Drobo system to go with my New iMAC machine! Boy, do I love that combination. I’m retired so I’m usually on the computer most of the morning and early afternoon. I’ve set things up with my Mac and Drobo to back up everything at 3:00 pm. Then I do a final backup at 9:00 pm just before hitting the sack. I have two 1TB disks and one 500GB disk in the Drobo. I still have one bay open and will put in a 2TB drive when the prices come back down. I also have new 2TB external drive that I use for second backup of photos only. The only time I use DVD’s now is for sending photos to people, making travel/vacation documentaries, and keeping back up copies of all my downloaded programs/applications.

    Dennis

  • No. My backup system consists of an internal mirror drive and off-site Carbonite. This way, I have three copies of my image files. I do have an eternal HD that I could use if deemed necessary.

  • Nope, no DVD’s. I use two external disk dirves. One stays in the office, the other is off-site. I rotate the off-site external disk drive with the extra ‘off-site’ drive in the office.

  • I still do because if a DVD goes down it is just one shoot not 3-6 months of work

  • I still use DVDs as a backup, though I do use Dual Layer discs. Even if you shoot 16GBs how many of those are actual keepers and not test shots, out of focus, bad lighting (could be from Strobe misfires, to sun coming from behind the clouds to over expose the shoot beyond saving), etc…?

    I myself rarely dispose of images on camera and wait till I can view them in Lightroom, GIMP, Photoshop, Canon Digital Photo Professional, or another image editing/viewing program. That’s when I will toss the obviously bad shots (a pre-edit).

    After the pre-edit, I then immediately back up all the remaining images (my keepers) onto at least 2 DVDs (one will remain on site in a fire safe, the other is stored securely off site), an extra internal HDD, an external HDD and if they are photos that are more important then the rest they will then get uploaded to a storage server that is off site (there are many great “cloud” services out there that one can use. I then save all edited copies onto DVDs, again one stored onsite in a fire safe the other off site. Though I do let clients know I can only guarantee that I will have copies of the images for up to a year from the initial shoot date (or last day of the shoot if it extends over multiple days), even if I do keep them for longer.

    If the images are for a client/customer/friend then they will also receive them on DVD (at a lower resolution and a small watermark on the images) along with limited copyrights (the ability to print off additional copies of the image, or use them on a social media site such as facebook).

  • I’ve been attempting to make the switch to external drives. The question I have is more directed at your primary storage. Do you use an internal or external hard drive for primary storage? I have outgrown my current internal, and externals are significantly cheaper. Are they as stable? I know they are definitely easier to use if/when I change my computer someday. But is it better or worse than an internal drive? Or indifferent? I’d like to hear what the pros are doing.

  • I actually use Flickr as an offsite backup. $25 and unlimited data backup. The only bad thing is it only backs up JPEG, but I still get a full JPEG, and don’t have to worry about anything being lost. I use Jeffery Freidl’s lightoom plugin to keep all my photos up to date on Flickr. One change in lightroom and it automatically changes the Flickr copy. Greatest combination ever.

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