V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 187
Some Nikon shooters swear by other software. The
key is you really need to use a program that’ll rename
files
during
the transfer. If you merely use an operating
system copy from card to computer, you can’t easily
automate the renaming of the files as they’re copied,
which I highly recommend. The reason you want to
rename: eventually you’ll take more than 9999 photos
and you’ll end up with duplicate file names that can
confuse you and your computer. If you don’t use
Sequential File Numbering and also don’t use file
renaming during transfer, I’d say you’re headed for a
massive file naming confusion on your computer. I’ve
seen one fellow’s computer where he had
several
dozen
files all named
DSC_0001.JPG
! Good luck
finding the right image, buddy, and I hope you don’t
accidentally copy two of those to the same folder.
4.
If any of the files you copied in Step 3 are JPEG files
66
,
you should also consider immediately using a product
that’ll resave them in a form without compression (you
can set up a Photoshop Action, for example, to take
all the files in a folder and save a
.TIF
or
.PSD
version
for editing. If you don’t perform this step, then you’ll
need to be attentive when you open files for
manipulation, since some software applies JPEG
compression
every
time you save a file in the JPEG
format (i.e. you could end up compressing previously
compressed files, adding artifacts). Fortunately,
Photoshop versions 6.0 and later don’t do that, but
beware of touching your JPEG files with other
products. (Note also that some programs perform
image rotation without recompressing JPEG images. I
find it safer to avoid the problem entirely by moving
my original files out of JPEG format as soon as
possible, even before rotating them.)
66
If you’re shooting
NEF+JPEG
you can safely ignore this advice, as you have a NEF
file that isn’t affected in this way.