I still only have a couple of USB sticks which I bought years ago. I mostly use SD cards as I have a lot of those lying around for cameras. But it is also feasible to transfer over a network, especially if you have gigabit ethernet.
Also, I bought my first BD drive last year, and stocked up on BD-Rs and DVD-Rs

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Unfortunately there isn't much technology/engineering literacy in a lot of the press. There was an article recently which got picked up by several newspapers about someone who's BT Digital Voice didn't work properly. She suggested that we should keep some skeleton service of the old analogue lines in service (presumably using the existing 30-40 year old equipment that BT are trying to get rid of) "just in case Putin switches off our WiFi".
Yes, BT really should get their act together and fix their customer's VoIP/internet service... but seriously...?
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I had a TV producer come round to see me a year ago as he wanted to buy some video. They only bought 10 seconds in the end, and I gave them the entire files that the 10 seconds were extracted from. They were shot in DV so were only 25Mbps and I just uploaded them to my web server. Easy enough.
But in order for them to make that purchase they wanted to see my original footage (or as much of it as I was willing to give them). He came round to see me (he was visiting the area anyway) and brought an HDD. Didn't take long to copy 2 hours worth of DV, but had it been 4K it could have taken ages. That would have been a nightmare for me to send over the internet. I almost certainly would have had to have made low resolution low bitrate proxies. In fact, unless they could provide me with access to an FTP server, I probably would have had to do the same thing for standard definition DV.
But the old technology enthusiast in me feels smug that I am responsible for 10 seconds worth of Channel 4 being shot on DV tape last year

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