Battery-Powered USB Enclosure 230
An anonymous reader pointed us to a story about a battery-powered USB disk enclosure. It operates on AA batteries. It's aluminum, and is sorta meant to offload data from cameras. It's only 2.5 inches, so that's not totally unreasonable, but I'm still struggling a bit with the 'Why' part of the equation.
iPod ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:iPod ? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:iPod ? (Score:3, Informative)
The write-up isn't completely clear, but judging from the price, I don't think the JPY6000 price includes the hard disk yet. Adding even a 10 GB disk to that should send the price well above $100, which is more than the Belkin iPod peripherals cost.
In other words, as most reviews point out, the Belkin solution is meant for people who already have iPods.
Re:iPod ? (Score:2)
How many AA batteries (the 2.5" version already requires four) do suppose the 3.5" desktop drives would need?
Re:iPod ? (Score:5, Insightful)
The ability to connect it directly to a camera, and copy all the data across at the press of a button.
Something that's very useful to people taking lots of pictures and storing them in Raw format.
Re:iPod ? (Score:3)
Learn fast - learn faster (Score:2)
Re:iPod ? (Score:2)
I own the latter, and I've used it to transfer about a dozen "rolls" totalling over 400 shots with no problems. The major drawback is battery consumption on the iPod (the connector
But much more costly... (Score:2)
The iPod can do this, but it requires a media card reader from Berkins. I checked the price a few months ago and it was ~100 dollars. So:
iPod (20 Gb): ~300
Berkins Media Attachment: ~100
Total: approx. $ 400
That's not very cheap.
Re:iPod ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:iPod ? (Score:2, Informative)
The iPod is a USB slave. It can only ever connect functionally to a USB master, such as your PC. This device would function as a USB master device (i.e. the PC side), by which you could copy data from any (I assume FAT-based) USB mass storage devices.
So this means camera, USB drive, MP3 player, anything that uses the USB Mass Storage driver. What would be interesting to know (I can't get the article) is whether or not it provides for the capability to write back
Re:iPod ? (Score:2)
Re:iPod ? (Score:2)
Re:iPod ? (Score:3, Informative)
Anyways, I thought there was a portable CDRW drive with that ability...
oo...found one that has a hard drive.
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchToo
Re:iPod ? (Score:2)
I say that last part because a friend of mine only managed to get half of his pictures back off of an iPod that he used while at a wedding in florida. And after buying the expensive iPod, FM Tuner, seperate speakers, seperate adapter to do this, and lord knows how many other accessories he bought for a
Article text for your convenience (Score:2, Informative)
HDD cases for both 2.5 and 3.5 inch drives are a dime-a-dozen these days. Alpha-Data tries to separate themselves from the pack with the "Copy BANK Case" - a 2.5" HDD case that supports battery-powered operation and can be used independent of a PC as a storage device for digital cameras and mp3 players.
[IMAGE] [techjapan.com]
Alpha-Data will release a USB2.0 external 2.5" HDD case that can operate on dry cell batteries, the "Copy BANK Case", in mid January 2005. It
Re:Article text for your convenience (Score:2)
Re:Article text for your convenience (Score:2)
I beg your pardon... the last I checked these devices were sold for $50 apiece, if not more. They are bountiful, but still expensive. What I'm waitinh for is a $5 IDE-usb enclosure, with a $10 CF2-usb adapter (CF being the master). While I applaud these devices' innovation, they are going in the wrong direction (bells and whistles instead of reliability and affordability).
Re:Article text for your convenience (Score:3, Funny)
[inhale]
Whoa, aluminum. It will match my powerbook.
[exhale]
[inhale]
It's not really that big either. It's about the same size as a HD based audio player.
[exhale]
Re:Article text for your convenience (Score:2)
Good for Photos on the move (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good for Photos on the move (Score:2)
-WS
Re:Good for Photos on the move (Score:2)
And yes, I do like my iPod very much and it was very nice to be able to backup my photos and not worry about filling up my camera. But not everyone has (or, as shocking as this may sound) wants an iPod. And some people's iPods are *gasp* full!
Re:Good for Photos on the move (Score:2)
Ok, I said Got an iPod? Try this (link ommitted). Much nicer.
For the RatBastards of the world, that is a conditional statement. It would say "if you ALREADY HAVE an iPod".
Now, as to the rest, I don't see how your unsubstantiated opinion is any better than mine. If you saw something totally amazing about that device, I certainly will not stop you from buying it.
Not that I really care, but here are some differences:
Re:Good for Photos on the move (Score:2)
There are plenty of devices designed for this, such as the Nikon Coolwalker [europe-nikon.com] that are better suited to the task.
Re:Good for Photos on the move (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a nice looking device, but the machine featured in this
Chuck
Re:Good for Photos on the move (Score:2)
I get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I get it (Score:2)
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because for my two month trip to Kerbleckistan, I'd rather a) not bring my laptop and b) not buy 40 1gig memory sticks at USD $300 or whatever the heck they cost for the journey despite wanting to take 40gig of photos.
Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Real cameras.... and cloning drives. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:3, Informative)
40960MB/11MB = 3700 photos
While 3700 photos is quite a lot, its definately not rediculous for someone who is shooting a lot for a month, especially if they are bracketing many of their exposures. Since you can't really see which one were just right until you get them into Photoshop, something like 2/3 might be later trashed. This leaves you with about 1300 good-quality photos from Kerbleckistan and neighbor
Re:Why? (Score:2)
One of the great things about digital photography is being able to take loads of photos and then cull the weaker ones later. It saves you getting home only to discover the two photos you took of AttractionX were blurred or were oddly lit by a flash going off from another camera.
AA is kinda low on power (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:AA is kinda low on power (Score:5, Interesting)
Pointless "commentary". (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because you can't see a need for it, doesn't automatically make it pointless.
It'll copy the data off of a camera at the press of a button, and takes standard AA batteries which means you can carry a bag full of spares and not have to worry about running out of power in the middle of an important photo shoot.
Re:Pointless "commentary". (Score:5, Informative)
It's not entirely his fault though - most new technologies and techniques get slammed here. This is unusual in that none of the +5 rated comments (currently) are negative.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Pointless "commentary". (Score:2)
They do, when something is actually new and useful. But when old, inferior, or gimmicky stuff gets hyped up as "new", then you can expect the largest groups of nerds on the net to show little mercy.
Re:Pointless "commentary". (Score:2)
The iPod was lame when it was first released: a late "me too" product with poor battery life, Macintosh-only connectivity, and no recharging through USB. (After several product cycles, it has now become a credible, if still somewhat overpriced, MP3 player.)
It's not entirely his fault though - most new technologies and techniques get slammed here.
That's probably because most technologies that are advertised as "new" aren't actually n
Re:Pointless "commentary". (Score:2)
Just because you think you see a need for something like a comma doesn't mean that you can put one in the middle of an otherwise perfectly good sentence.
Here is the why. (Score:5, Informative)
This drive isn't JUST a drive like other 2.5" USB external drives. It also has the ability to talk to other USB devices, such as a camera (or sound recorder, or what have you). It can mount the USB device - let's use a camera for argument's sake - and copy files from it at the press of a button. Normal USB drives do NOT do this. the iPod doesn't either, without extra hardware.
So the point is - you can run around with your brand new EOS 1Ds Mark II spitting out 10MB RAW 16megapixel images all day long, and not have to worry about a maximum of 4GB on your (expensive!) compact flash card. You can shoot a bunch of images, connect to the drive, press a button to transfer to an 80GB drive...
'Why' part of the equation? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:'Why' part of the equation? (Score:2)
but cheers for the burrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrn
bus-powered usb / firewire ? (Score:2)
are there any bus-powered usb / firewire enclosures?
Re:bus-powered usb / firewire ? (Score:2)
Yes. [buy.com]
The reason of "Why" (Score:3, Insightful)
I take my laptop with me on every vacation I take because I have to - not because I want to.
Why? (Score:2)
Two words: African safari
Re:Why? (Score:2)
What about Rechargable Wireless Access Points? (Score:2)
Yes this is a little off-topic, but I think there definitely needs to be more battery powered solutions for day-to-day electronics that otherwise require us to carry along a heavy ac adapter.
The point (Score:2)
So, if you have a usb card reader, and this thing, and you're shooting video on a 1 gig CF card, you can then dump that gig to this, and keep going with your video. That way, if you're on vacation, you have a nice little enclosure to carry, instead of a notebook, and you can piece the bits together when you get home.
Not a lot of use if you're carrying a notebook anyway, bu
This could be good... (Score:2)
I want a battery-powered hub (Score:5, Informative)
I came close with a 5-port linksys "hub" that didn't consume much power and took 7.5v, so I chained 5 AA batteries together in a harness and mucked together a connector. It has a decent battery life (about 3 hours normal use), but the 5-port linksys "hubs" ARE ACTUALLY SWITCHES. Stupid linksys.
Anyways, if you happen to work at a networking manufacturer, lightly suggest to them to produce a small hub with a built-in battery bay that takes 4 AA batteries or something.
Re:I want a battery-powered hub (Score:2)
Seems like nobody makes hubs any more.
Re:I want a battery-powered hub (Score:2)
There are other regulators you could use, but I don't remember part numbers for them.
Reminds me of the Clik drive (Score:2)
Looks like some people get it. . . (Score:2, Informative)
It will allow connection of USB devices (pretty much digital cameras) and will act as host, allowing uploading of all the files. You could then reformat your memory card (stick, whatever) and snap more pics.
Certainly a lot cheaper to buy one 40GB HD than 40 1GB CF Cards (a lot less space too).
Great for vacations, short trips, etc. The fact that it runs on regular batteries is a plus. If your batteries die on
Re:Looks like some people get it. . . (Score:2)
A more useful device... (Score:2)
It would be great for storing vacation photos without having to take/find a computer or buy expensive extra memory cards. I think that you would be able to get the enclosure + and 80GB drive for roughly the cost of a 512MB xD card.
They also have a device that burns CDs directly from camera cards (with
The iPod can do this also, with an accessory (Score:3, Informative)
It's about $80 on Belkin's site, probably cheaper elsewhere:
http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.proces
Re:The iPod can do this also, with an accessory (Score:2, Informative)
For digital photography... (Score:5, Informative)
There's lots more options here
http://fhoude34.free.fr/PortableHD_Main.htm [fhoude34.free.fr]
Most are going to be a good bit bigger, but have more functionality as well.
Other simillar products (Score:3, Informative)
The Innoplus PhotoTainer [innoplus.com] also does this, plus it runs Linux.
All of these can be used as MP3 players. Some can even play video. The Archos Gmini 120 [archos.com] would be the most economical choice.
Why? (Score:2, Insightful)
A few years ago, I was a salesman at a small computer shop. We had a guy come in who wanted to buy a digital camera and a hard drive for offloading the photos to. However, they both had to be powered off standard alkaline batteries. Why?
Because he was going gold-mining in Siberia for three months during the summer. That means zero ability to recharge the camera, and he'd fill up a CF card pretty quick. Can't take a laptop... no way to recharge it. So, he needed a HD he could just take
What about Bluetooth (Score:2, Interesting)
Better Solution (Score:3, Informative)
Instead, I use a similar device (the X's Drive Pro), which is an external hard drive (USB) that includes several built-in card readers. Connected to the PC, the card readers and hard drives are individually mounted, but when not connected to the computer, the device itself can copy everything on the connected memory cards to the hard drive with a single button click.
This workflow allows me to fill up a CF card, put another in the camera and keep shooting, and put the full CF card in the drive and let it make the backup copy while sitting in the camera bag.
I then *only* reuse cards if I run out, thus protecting against a hard drive drop/failure, errored-out copy, dead hard drive battery, etc.
When you are serious about photography, having an hard drive backup with automated copy capability is a MUST. I just got a call this morning from a friend whose photographer accidently lost some wedding ceremony pictures due to a failed copy to his laptop--he reused the card for Christmas before realizing it, so 15 shots couldn't be recovered (I was there as well in a non-pro capacity and got a few keepers). It's also a heckuva lot cheaper than having an endless supply of CF cards to travel with.
iRiver has this... it's called "USB on the go" (Score:2)
This was one of two features that stopped me from buying an iPod... the other being that the iRiver is just a USB mass storage device and that the music is stored in a vanilla file system... no database to update if you choose not to use it (meaning no software required to use it (meaning that your use of the hardware isn't limited to the software))
Damn this is silly (Score:2)
Hey! I've come across this device that is completely useless, but I'd like to tell you about it because I like the sound of my typing. Of course, even this is dumb, because the thing has obvious uses for photographers that don't want to lug around laptops everywhere they go.
Oh, come on. OLD stuff. (Score:2)
Currently the top runners are the Tripper, the Image Vault, and a few others I can't think of.
Belkin makes a device that snaps on the iPod and does this. There's an add-on for at least one of the Archos players that does this.
In other news, I've heard that there are these things that you can put in your pocket that carry data around. They're called "floppies"
Perfect for unpowered USB ports (Score:2)
The only thing I can think of to improve this device is if it had a internal battery, which could be recharged when it was powered by the USB port.
Good device, but some downsides (Score:2)
However, for camera use it has a few drawbacks. Firstly, most cameras are USB Full-Speed - that's the slow USB. I think even the D70 which is supposed to be high-speed (faster USB), is really full-speed. (USB 2.0 does not imply high-speed). That means copying some of that larger cards (1GB plus, be
oops (Score:2)
I had forgotten to turn Xanthia caching on, too, which doesn't help.
Re:Nothing for you to see here. Please move along. (Score:2, Funny)
This is actually useful! (Score:5, Informative)
What does this mean?
Well, if you want to dump Photos from a USB camera, the HD must be attached to a whole PC and OS! A battery-powered device that manages to maintain a USB root hub, and have an HD attached is a pretty nifty trick, and offers many (not all) of the Firewire advantages. It is certainly compact and lightweight, and I doubt you wait for it to boot...
Re:This is actually useful! (Score:3, Interesting)
Soooooo... (Score:2)
Re:This is actually useful! (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, there is, its called "USB On-the-go"- see http://www.usb.org/developers/onthego/ [usb.org] which is what this device is an example of, allowing usb devices to negotiate connections without the use of a pc
Re:This is actually useful! (Score:2)
Re:This is actually useful! (Score:2)
He was saying that this device was slick because it maintains a USB root hub/stack, whereas a typical USB disk doesn't-- hence the typical USB disk cannot be plugged directly into a camera and requires intervention from a host. This device has its own USB stack, root hub, and drivers to act as a USB host when it is plugged into a camera, and can also act as a USB device when plugged into a PC.
Re:This is actually useful! (Score:2)
Ahhhh... Are you asking for someone to POSIX_ME_HARDER? [google.com]
Not a banner day for Slashdot editors (Score:2)
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sure djrok212 could get a nice discount for buying in bulk though.
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:2)
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:2)
With this gadget I could take photos in high-quality raw format, and not worry about storage, and have room for the pics of my family too. That's a lot more convenient than taking trip
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:2)
How many people forget to download the pics from their last vacation? My trip to Universal Studios, many months ago, is still on my camera right now. Hehe.
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:2)
Two years ago I took a 2.5 week trip around Italy and am left with 507 images from my old Canon A70 point-and-shoot. This was after deleting at least as many that didn't come out for whatever reason. I've since gotten even more i
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:2)
Our new 6 MP digital camera says it can hold 667 pictures on the 1GB flash card I bought for it so I think I'm set for awhile. Plus compactflash is so common these days you can just drop into a local electronics store and pick up extras if you run out.. assuming you're not on a hiking tri
Re:Memorysticks don't require any power.. (Score:2, Informative)
If you have a Sony digital camera, you *have* to buy Memory Stick. But with a battery powered HD, you can just use the 16meg stick that came with the camera and dump pictures to the HDD.
I guess you take 'snap shots' (Score:2, Troll)
A 4gb CF card holds (on my 10D) about 530 photographs. I transfer said card to two battery backup units- a 20gb and a 40gb.
On my trip to St. Thomas I came back with a little over 2300 photographs; several of which I edited and stitched together to make massive panoramas. A panorama consisting of 14 frames tends to take quite a bit of disk space in the R
Re:I guess you take 'snap shots' (Score:2)
Re:I guess you take 'snap shots' (Score:3, Informative)
Brownies were about 620 sized negatives- approximately 120 (6x6 cm) film formats today.
The film was processed on long glass tables that ran east/west at Kodak- huge skylights lit the room and 'printed' the image onto paper undeneath the film.
The film was scraped off the glass, destroyed, and the glass was used again.
And if you understand JPG you understand why you shouldn't use it. Unless it's an Extended Jpg (Kodak format) that allows for shiftable exposure.
After al
Re:When will people learn... (Score:2)
Re:When will people learn... (Score:2)
Re:link already broken (Score:5, Funny)
Actually the AA batteries probably died.
I don't believe power is the issue (Score:2)
more than likely it is because most USB ports cannot supply the required amount of current to properly power a USB drive case.
That's probably not the main issue. I picked up one of these [iomagic.com] the day after Thanksgiving for $129.99. It is a 4GB portable USB hard drive (platters, servos, etc.) that runs from a single USB connection. It might be nice to have a battery assist [on the I/O Magic device] so it doesn't drain the battery of the host, but it doesn't appear to be absolutely necessary
As an aside, t
Re:The reason is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Thus, when it's connecte
Re:This has been done (Score:2)