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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Author
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Topic: Any film companies using large capacity flash drives?
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 11-04-2019 07:44 AM
I use USB flash sticks to distribute the DCPs I make all the time, though admittedly I am not a large scale commercial operation such as a post house. I just do it as a sideline for a few people on an occasional basis.
They are a little slower to write (my rendering machine will write to a typical USB3 flash stick at about 90-100 MB/s, and to a CRU via SATA at 120-130. On an old school server that only has USB2, they are significantly slower to ingest. On a newer server or IMS with USB3, ingest speeds are about the same for USB3 flash sticks and CRU drives, IMHO.
While GB for GB, USB3 flash sticks are still more expensive at the higher capacities, you don't need the higher capacities for a typical DCP project. In this neck of the woods, a 128GB stick is now around $20-30, and a 256GB one is $40-50. The cheapest spinning rust drive you can buy to put in a CRU cartridge is around $50 for a 500GB one (plus the cost of the CRU cartridge itself, if you don't have one).
But you're never going to need that extra 300-400GB to distribute a typical DCP. As against which, you can pop a USB stick in a padded envelope and ship it by regular mail ($5 to anywhere in the country, or $20 if it has to be certified), whereas for a CRU drive, you need to put it in a Pelican case (or similar), and shipping will cost you a bare minimum of $30-40, and likely a lot more for long-distance and/or rush shipping.
I agree with Carsten that the big distributors (e.g. Deluxe Technicolor) will likely never move to this method of distribution, because:
- They already have millions of spinning rust drives in CRU cartridges, plus the shipping infrastructure for them.
- A significant number of theaters still have old school servers, for which any ingest method other than CRU and through the media LAN will be very slow.
- Online delivery will likely supersede physical media for DCP delivery before existing inventories of CRU drives wear out, and old school servers are replaced.
But for small scale operations here and now, requiring delivery to theaters that cannot download feature DCPs, the advantages of using USB flash sticks vastly outweigh the one drawback for the end user (slow ingest on older servers), IMHO.
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