Before Joy can put them back, she and Sadness are carried off with the core memories, leaving Disgust, Fear and Anger to deal with Riley. Joy and Sadness venture the various islands and a labyrinth-like place called Long Term Memory, where Riley's past memories are restored. They are soon assisted by Riley's childhood imaginary friend Bing Bong, a scrappily-dressed pink cotton candy-elephant-cat-dolphin creature. Bing Bong was hoping to reconnect with Riley via a Memory of his song-powered wagon "rocket". Although initially, Bing Bong is happy and cheerful, the pair discover that he is secretly miserable, having been out of a job since Riley was four, he desperately wants to feel loved again, reasoning that, if he has no purpose, he will cease to exist. Although Joy attempts to keep this revelation positive, Sadness comforts a crying Bing Bong (which leaves Joy more confused than ever as to how being sad could help Bing Bong).īing Bong discovers that his rocket had already been dumped into "the Memory Dump", a seemingly, never-ending pit of darkness beneath headquarters where obsolete memories go to be erased from existence for good. Meanwhile, in Riley's mind, Anger, Disgust and Fear are doing their best to guide Riley through her new surroundings. In order to eliminate duplicate photos we have to start at the source, with your camera.Īnger accidentally instigates a confrontation with Riley's friend Meg when video chatting her, which causes the island which controls this part of her personality, "Friendship Island" to collapse into the Abyss. Unfortunately for your phone, there is nothing you can do as the file numbering scheme is already set for your phone. Fortunately however, most modern phones have the continuous file naming scheme already in use, so you can pretty much skip this step if your phone is the only camera you use. Modern standalone digital cameras (those devices that are only cameras…not your phone) have different file naming schemes available. The most common two schemes are Continuous and Auto Reset. The Continuous file naming scheme will continually number your images from 0001 to 9999 and then reset back to 0001. This means that you get 10,000 pictures (yeah it’s actually 9999) with unique image numbers. This is the first good measure to guard against duplicate files. Delete Your Digital Photos After Each Transfer If you choose Auto Reset, then your file numbering will start with 1 every time you put in a memory card in your camera.Ģ. Next step in order to eliminate duplicate photos is to address the process for transferring photos from our camera (or phone) to our computer. This is where duplicate photos can enter our computer.Īfter transferring photos from your phone to your computer, I always empty my phone photo storage. This way I can’t transfer the same photos twice. Talking about a stand alone camera now, the next thing to do is to empty your memory card after you transfer your pictures to the computer. This way you will never transfer the same pictures to your computer. I know that to some photographers this is really bad advice. What happens if your computer crashes? You have only one copy of your pictures and that’s very risky. I agree in principle, but if you have a regular backup setup every day, then there’s nothing to worry about. You will get at least one more copy when the backup kicks in. I would want to say that since I have started deleting my memory cards after each transfer, I have never ran into duplicate images on my computer. To setup a backup strategy read my tutorial on creating an efficient backup strategy for your digital photos. If you are using database image processing software like Adobe Lightroom (or Picasa), you have to remember that if you change the folder structure outside of the software, then it will take a while for the software to read the changes and update its database.
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