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21 hours ago, idusidusi said:

Something I would love to do. No way does that work. The only camera I know that does just that is the PixII range from Pixii and that works with USB-Sticks and SSD because that is exactly what I did.

 

However, if you are travelling with an iPad, then I would be pretty sure if you add a USB-C hub and an SSD, then it will work. You attach the hub to the USB port, the camera to the hub, the SSD to the hub. On the iPad you should see both and be able to transfer from camera to SSD - just like with a laptop. HA-HA this does not work - up pops a window asking to install Fotos. So I would resort to having a hub, removing the card from camera put that in a reader attached to the hub, add an SSD and then when you look on the iPad, both card and SSD will be visible, copy and paste between the two.

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On 11/17/2023 at 1:18 AM, jaapv said:

What is the difference to using the SD card? Both stick and card are portable devices to transport your images.

I don't carry a phone, iPad,or computer with me all the time so it would be nice to have a compact back-up like  an SSD.

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There used to be deives that could do that. I remember researching such a drive years ago. But for Conpact Flash not SD and SSDs were probanly 5-10€/GB, so that meant HDD, which is not ideal because of power requirements and the chance of breaking when taking it with you. 
 

if you don’t carry a smartphone you are in a really small minority and with a problem without solution. Just carry multiple SDs. It’s not a backup but the chance of multiple cards failling is nearly 0. 

Edited by Qwertynm
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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 7 months later...

There’s a way that’s pretty close to what you want:

1. Connect your SSD to your iPhone (sorry, don’t know if it works on Android).

2. Connect to your Leica with Leica Photos 

3. Select the photos you want to transfer

4. Instead of choosing DOWNLOAD, instead tap the share icon. 
5. Choose Save Files, select your SSD as your destination, and Voila. 

IMPORTANT: The files aren’t saved to your iPhone. They aren’t in the cloud. But they ARE on your SSD. 

Edited by Richard B.
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I have a couple Western Digital My Passport Wireless 1TB drives. They're basically a HDD or a SSD with various interfaces, including a SD card reader. Not sure if WD still make them now, but there should be other manufacturers. 

Either that or the iPhone/Android phone method described above works too.  

Edited by Premix-provost
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19 minutes ago, Le Chef said:

Surely it’s cheaper, faster, safer, to simply exchange SD cards and block them from being overwritten? Why bother faffing about with making the process more complicated than it needs to be?

that's what i do, 5-6 [or more] 128gb sandisk cards [for a 2 week trip with 2 cameras], once full, lock it and dump it in the suitcase and carry on with the next one

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24 minutes ago, Le Chef said:

Surely it’s cheaper, faster, safer, to simply exchange SD cards and block them from being overwritten? Why bother faffing about with making the process more complicated than it needs to be?

I will transfer copies of the images into my computer for backup.  But like you, protect them from being overwritten.  But even if the SD card gets messed up, there is software which can recover lost images even after formatting the SD card.  And the software is not that expensive.  

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