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Photographer's Guide to the Digital Lifecycle: Real-life workflow scenarios for managing still and motion photography assets [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, height x width x depth: 182x229x13 mm, weight: 530 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-May-2011
  • Izdevniecība: New Riders Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 0321771605
  • ISBN-13: 9780321771605
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 42,13 €*
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, height x width x depth: 182x229x13 mm, weight: 530 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-May-2011
  • Izdevniecība: New Riders Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 0321771605
  • ISBN-13: 9780321771605
Photographers, videographers, and other creative content makers are dealing with a new world of media that presents the challenge of managing all their raw and prepared data produced in the creative process. The framework for managing this data must go beyond Digital Asset Management (DAM) to the holistic data lifecycle perspective.

Enter Photographer's Guide to the Digital Lifecycle. Offering much more than a DAM bookthis is a comprehensive guide to modern, real-world digital asset storage practices. It goes beyond things like metadata and how to use DAM applications and looks at the whole process, from ingest to archive. In addition to the usual DAM concerns of metadata and tagging, Photographer's Guide to the Digital Lifecycle brings to light the fundamental strengths and weaknesses of the digital storage mediums we choose and the best techniques for applying them. It looks beyond DAM software to real-life examples for keeping your data safe and managed, from the moment of production to its status as historical artifact.
Introduction ix
one A Starting Point
3(22)
A Bit of History
4(2)
Questions About the Digital Lifecycle
6(19)
Why Is It a Lifecycle?
6(2)
I'm Just a One-person Shop, Why All the Effort?
8(2)
Is the Digital Lifecycle New?
10(2)
Why the Concern About the Value of Data?
12(1)
Data Can Disappear?
12(2)
How Do I Know the Digital Lifecycle Is for Me?
14(2)
How Do I Prepare for Implementing the Digital Lifecycle?
16(1)
How Do I Get Others to Work with the Digital Lifecycle?
17(1)
What Is the Difference Between the Digital Lifecycle and Digital Asset Management?
18(1)
Can't My Works Survive Without the Digital Lifecycle?
19(1)
Will It Cost Much to Implement the Digital Lifecycle?
20(1)
Where Can I Find Out More About the Digital Lifecycle?
21(4)
two Planning Your Creative Workflow
25(36)
Building a Plan
26(12)
Determining Your Situation
26(2)
Approaching the Planning Process
28(1)
Why Organic Growth Isn't Always Beneficial
29(1)
Building Your Workflow
30(4)
Selecting Your Tools
34(2)
Capacity Planning
36(1)
Planning for Standards
37(1)
Curating Your Works
38(15)
Data
40(1)
Full Lifecycle Actions
40(6)
Sequential Actions
46(5)
Occasional Actions
51(2)
Real-world Scenarios
53(8)
Preventing a Workflow Crisis
53(3)
Establishing a Successful Plan
56(1)
Sayonara Data!
57(4)
three Organizing the Ingest Process
61(32)
Keeping Your Data Secure
62(1)
Choosing Your Secondary Storage Hardware
63(3)
Intermediate Storage
63(2)
Direct-to-Computer Storage
65(1)
Uploading to Online Storage
65(1)
Naming Conventions
66(7)
Automating File Renaming and Handling
69(4)
Choosing Ingest Software
73(12)
Asset Management and Cataloging
73(12)
Real-world Scenarios
85(8)
A Land Rover as a Studio
86(1)
Securing the Memories
87(2)
Travel Video Workflow
89(4)
four Understanding Storage and Server Solutions
93(40)
Examining Storage Devices
94(9)
Solid State Storage
95(2)
Disk Drive Storage
97(4)
Tape Storage
101(2)
Exploring Storage Systems
103(23)
External Drive Enclosures
103(5)
RAID Devices
108(12)
Servers
120(3)
Network Attached Storage (NAS)
123(1)
Xsan
124(1)
Power and Cooling Considerations
125(1)
Real-world Scenarios
126(7)
Homemade Recycled Server Solution
126(2)
Standard Server Solution
128(1)
High-end Xsan Solution
128(5)
five Implementing a Backup Plan
133(42)
Defining a Backup
134(5)
Authentic Backups
134(4)
Faux Backup
138(1)
Building a Backup Plan
139(5)
Backup Schemes
140(3)
Budget Planning
143(1)
Choosing Backup Hardware
144(4)
Disk Storage
144(1)
Tape Storage
145(2)
Network Storage
147(1)
Choosing Backup Software
148(1)
Implementing a Backup System
149(12)
Backup Scheduling
149(1)
Backup Type
150(2)
Backup Rotation
152(3)
Media Recycling
155(2)
Online Backup
157(3)
A Layered Backup Approach
160(1)
Restoring Data
161(1)
Test Your Backups!
161(1)
Real-world Scenarios
161(14)
Marketing Department
161(4)
Photography Studio
165(2)
Video Production Facility
167(2)
Disaster Recovery: A Lesson Plan
169(6)
six Archiving Your Assets
175(28)
Determining What You Should Archive
177(1)
Archiving Processes
178(5)
Taking Lessons from the National Archives
178(5)
Practical Considerations for an Archive
183(13)
Cataloging Your Data
183(3)
Deciding on Archiving Storage
186(2)
Automated Archiving Systems
188(1)
Increasing the Life Span of Your Assets
189(7)
Real-world Scenarios
196(7)
George Blood, L.P.
196(3)
Political Organization
199(1)
Video Production Company
200(3)
seven Recovering Your Data
203(22)
Determining Causes of Data Loss
204(7)
Preventing Hardware Failures
205(4)
Diagnosing Software and Usage Failures
209(2)
Losing Your Data
211(3)
Triaging Noisy Hard Drives
212(1)
Resolving Hard Drive Failure
213(1)
Assessing Malfunctioning Memory Cards and Other Devices
213(1)
Using Procedures and Tools to Recover Data
214(5)
Working with Professional Data Recovery Services
214(2)
Using a DIY Data Recovery Approach
216(3)
Real-world Scenarios
219(6)
Rescued from a Watery Grave
219(1)
The Best-Laid Recovery Plans
220(1)
Don't Drop the Baby
221(4)
eight Understanding Digital Asset Management Tools
225(28)
Defining the Key Attributes of DAM
226(3)
Definition of Structure
226(1)
Consistency of Action
227(2)
Incorporating Asset Management Techniques
229(10)
Directory-based Manual Management
229(4)
DAM Application Software
233(6)
DAM as Part of the Lifecycle
239(5)
Reviewing the Digital Lifecycle for DAM
239(5)
Why DAM Can Fail in the Real World
244(3)
Preventing Failure
246(1)
Real-world Scenarios
247(6)
Performance Media Group
247(1)
Technical Data Publisher
248(1)
Architectural Photographer
249(4)
Appendix: DIY Datacenter 253(11)
Index 264
Ben Greisler is an experienced IT professional and owner of Kadimac Corp., which provides Macintosh integration services to business. He is also co-author of Apple Training Series: Mac OS X Directory Services v10.6 and Apple Training Series: Mac OS X Server Essentials v10.6.