So, I'm assuming the electricity and outlets are the same as here? How about the humidity,...wondering if that's an issue for the laptop?
Yes, electricity is the same, no transformers or adapters.
Of course the sea level humidity is an issue for your laptop. Worth worrying about? Not for a visitor. Locals view hardware as disposable items. They usually puke out in time for the next necessary hardware upgrade, unlike the dinosaurs that we have back home.
I think you are looking for a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. If you are looking absolutely preserving images? The best way would be to download them on site or back home to 2 seperate CD discs. If you're going to be anal, go all the way.
You have to draw the line and distinction between "perceived need" and "unquenchable desire". The price of memory cards is so low at this point, why not just take a dozen along? If you're shooting hi resolution stills, it would really be hard to fill a 2 gig card in a week with enough decent images to fill it. With seven 1 meg cards, you could have one for each day. No muss, no fuss~ you could even keep the large mass of "pitch-outs", the bad stuff that you'll never use.
Before cards came down in price, I bought an Epson p-3000, the "adult I-Pod" for media freaks.
If you
haveta gotta drag a laptop to paradise, that means you have the "luxury" of doing so. These days, that luxury has became more dear with the airlines squeezing us every which way.
K.I.S.S. Oh I know,
this is almost as emotional a subject as
gloves arguments,
Spare Air and taking Regulators as carry-on.
What it all boils down to is: what must I carry along to make this dive trip (or is it a vacation with diving?) a success. Will it be my own gear? Will it be my perscription mask? Two wetsuits? What
must I pack in my bags to make this trip functional?
My "jones" is dive lights~ I am nuts for night diving. I have about 9 different lights, all different & for very specific applications, also about a dozen various "back up" secondary lights (all the same). Blacklights to 16 watt 1956 Chevy Headlamps. I can only take what is needed for a specific trip.
Same with my media storage issues. Sure, I could bring a computer and fuss with all of that connectivity stuff and worrying about whether the technology will survive the humidity or the power... or I can take the KISS method. Or is it, as my Psychiatrist brother-in-law asks, an issue of refusing "to be out of touch" for a week? I asked him if something else plays into it... The inherent fixation of all of us SCUBA divers (me included, too, no doubt) with lust in our hearts for
BSO's? (
Bright
Shiny
Objects, things with serial numbers, stuff we gawk at in dive magazines). I believe that my brother in law is barred from this discussion as he has a pair of Porsche 911's that he races on weekends. To each their own- it's like women and shoes or guys with power tools.
You aren't wrong if "you must" take a laptop, you just have the luxury of that size and weight commodity option. This list of
what you take with mutates and evolves as you accumulate bottom time and focus on different aspects of the sport.
Travel as lightly as you can. This is advice from two lifetimes (my wife, too) of adventure travel. Roatan is one of those places where you really won't need 1/2 of what you brought. It isn't really part of a third world country so much as it is a suburb of Houston. Distressingly civilized in it's own weird way.
Especially the shoes. :blinking: