Download from digital camera




















All great photography begins with pressing the shutter! Create a new email document. Add the photo as an attachment, and as Steely Dan said, "send it off in a letter to yourself.

Method 4. Use your smart phone's camera. Some apps, such as Instagram, automatically upload pictures to a shared space, and are available for you—or anybody else—to download to your computer.

Share it with the Instagram community, and email it to yourself while you're at it. Method 5. Sign up for iCloud. This may well be the simplest and fastest way to move your images from camera to computer.

With iCloud, your iOS camera's photos are automatically uploaded to the cloud, and distributed to all your iCloud-enabled devices, be they Mac or PC. Take your picture. When you get home, access your Photo Stream with iPhoto or Aperture, or any other device that recognizes Photo Stream. Method 6. Connect your camera or memory card to your computer. This is a simple step. You can usually connect your camera directly to your computer or just take out your memory card and stick it into a card reader that is connected to your computer.

The usual connection is via USB. Your camera or memory card to your computer the Windows XP Camera Wizard window should come up when you connect. Choose pictures. This next step allows you to choose which pictures you want to transfer. Also, the wizard allows you to rotate the pictures and also view picture details like the date when the picture was taken. This way you can determine how you will name your destination folder. Most of the times however, you would just move all the pictures into one folder on your computer without doing anything else…but if you want more information, the wizard gives your this ability.

Choose destination. Now you have two fields you have to fill in. The first one is entitled: Type a name for this group of pictures. The value that you enter here will be the final file name of each picture on your computer.

For example: if you know that the pictures you're transferring were taken on June 21, , and they were taken at Idora Park, set the group name to Idora-Park, and then each file will feature this name plus an index counter: 01,02, etc. This way you can also identify each picture by its name. Wait for the transfer to end. Check your destination folder—all the pics should be there. My computer is not recognizing my camera and autoplay doesn't show up on my desktop. Not Helpful 2 Helpful 5.

What do I do if my camera shows "busy" when I am trying to transfer images to my computer? Try shutting the camera off first, then try shutting down the computer.

After you've rebooted them, try the transfer again. If that is the case, you could try transferring one file at a time until you have them all done. You may even have to reboot both systems after each transfer. Not Helpful 3 Helpful 1. I have an old photo print. How can I get it to my computer so that I can email it to someone? The best method is by using a photo scanner. If this is not available to you but a smartphone is , download the HP Smart Print app.

This app will allow you to use your phone and scan documents and images and save them as either PDFs or jpeg files. Not Helpful 0 Helpful 0. I suggest taking any files you want from you card off of said card as formatting erases all data.

When I download photos from my Canon camera to my computer, it saves them as a large jpeg file. How can I save them as a smaller file?

You should be able to adjust that in your camera's settings. Change it to a small jpg or lower its quality once it is on your computer. It depends on the camera as the port location will vary. I suggest looking through your camera's instruction manual to figure out the placement of the port. Not Helpful 1 Helpful 0. Not Helpful 2 Helpful 1. Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered. By using this service, some information may be shared with YouTube.

Another option is to buy a Memory Card Reader. Helpful 0 Not Helpful 1. If you use a Mac you will not need to install the camera software. Our clients News and views Guides Get in touch. How to download pictures from camera to computer. Alternatively, if you have an appropriate USB cable, you may be able to connect your camera or phone directly to your computer. Follow these step-by-step instructions to download pictures from camera or mobile phone to computer using the Windows Photos App Step 1: Connect the digital camera or mobile phone to your computer with a USB cable that can transfer files.

Step 3: Turn on the camera or phone. Guide last updated 6th October Next steps. How to organise photos. How to edit pictures with Windows Live Photo Gallery. How to share photos. How to email a picture. Locate the folder in which you saved your photos on your computer. Depending on your email provider, you can either double-click on a photo, or highlight the photo and click 'Open' or 'Attach.

Repeat this step until you have attached all the photos you want to share. Click on send and your email will begin the process of sending out the message, with all of the photos attached.

This may take a few minutes depending on the size of your attachments. Keep your email window open until the message disappears, which means you've sent it successfully. Eye-Fi cards should continue to function in stand-alone mode which means no cloud syncing as long as the apps are available in the app store. There will be no future updates to their apps. The Keenai service used for storing your data in the cloud will shut down on November 30, After December 1, , you will no longer be able to access your data.

An increasing number of digital cameras ship with built-in Wi-Fi support that makes it easy to wirelessly transfer your photos from your camera to your local network for storage, post-processing, uploading to social media, or all of the above—no tethering your camera to your computer or pulling the SD card required.

Introduced several years ago, Wi-Fi enabled SD cards take advantage of the constant reduction and refinement of electronic components to pack in both photo storage and a tiny Wi-Fi radio into the form factor of an SD memory card. Aside from the label they look absolutely identical to their non-networked counterparts. Before all else, check to see if you even need a Wi-Fi SD card.



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