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Of course, I’m not referring to the Waldorf Astoria, or any other top dollar luxury hotel. I’m talking about your average low to mid range hotel, i.e. 2-3 star establishments. Of all the cities I’ve visited, New York’s hotels are definitely the worst. On this occasion, I had a toilet in my room (no door in-between), but no provision for washing my hands after using it. No trash can in the room. No glass for water, or reading lamp, on the bed-side table. No bed-side table.

I don’t expect wonders from a two star hotel, but basic sanitary considerations should be a top priority in any hotel or hostel. I invite all New York 2 and 3 star hotel owners to visit Paris, London, Johannesburg, or even closer to home – Boston or Washington D.C. – to see how it’s done.

I ran into this problem while travelling. I wandered into a camera shop, and asked to try out a Canon 5D they had on display. I took the CF card from my 40D, put it in the 5D, fired off some shots, and then put the card back in my 40D. I quickly viewed the photos – the 40D had no problem displaying the 5D’s images, but the file numbers had changed. I didn’t notice this immediately – only that evening when reviewing the day’s pictures. The 40D was on 5000 odd, and now, all of a sudden, it was counting in the 8000 range.

I realised that this was because the 5D were on that many shots, and my 40D is set to “continuous” – it simply continued where the card stopped. While this makes no difference to the operation of the camera, the continuous file numbering is the only way I have to know how many clicks my shutter has done. So I wanted to fix it. Since I was travelling I didn’t have the tools at hand to make screenshots, etc, so I did this again on purpose, just on a smaller scale. Here’s how to fix it:

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