![]() And these would be painful decisions, especially done via a camera screen the size of a large postage stamp. This was only my second day in Tokyo I still had a lot of places to see. I was worried that I’d need to start culling photos, selecting which to keep and which to delete. ![]() I had one high-capacity memory stick, but even that could only get so full. My low-capacity memory sticks could only hold four high-resolution photos each. The immaculate gardens contained an impressive building featuring a fantastic trove of regional history. My first major destination was the Tokyo National Museum. So, I headed off to Japan for a two-week vacation with a handful of mismatched, obsolete memory sticks that I’d scrounged from old boxes at home. Before leaving home, I tried to stock up on memory sticks for my digital camera (Sony DSC-P92) but the format was obsolete and no longer available. I bought a refurbished netbook as a temporary replacement until I got back. My home computer died a week before my trip. This photo journey had started with a last-minute disaster - the kind I’d never have today, thanks to using Mylio to sync and backup my photos from anywhere, anytime. Photo storage issues during travel are stressful ![]() Shooting for seven straight hours in one day, I produced over 1,000 photos, or about one photo every 30 seconds. My favorite travel photo session was at the Tokyo National Museum in Japan about a decade ago. Generally I don’t take a lot of photos but when I do, I take a lot of photos - and that’s usually while I’m traveling.
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