You certainly can do so. You just need to connect the camera through the USB wire to the computer and you will be able to see the pictures by going to My Computer and then the Camera's folder.
If your camera shows up as a removable drive, just copy the pictures over. If not, consult the manual or be more specific about the camera.
Either connect those two devices with USB adators or if it is a laptop then remove the SD card from camera and insert in computer slot and copy.
The easiest way to put pictures on your camera would be to get a card reader and plug that into your computer. Then drag the pictures on your computer into the same folder as the one where your camera stores pictures when you take them.
Depends from what device. A typical digital camera will plug into the computer via a usb cable. If your computer is running windows xp, a new drive will appear into My Computer, and you can then browse your computers and copy/paste them into other locations. Depends from what device. A typical digital camera will plug into the computer via a usb cable. If your computer is running windows xp, a new drive will appear into My Computer, and you can then browse your computers and copy/paste them into other locations.
Use your computer if it's got a burner. eD
use USB.... A digital camera is usually connected to a computer via a USB cable, or by using a cable supplied by the camera maker, so pictures can be downloaded from the camera and saved to the computer's hard-drive. A camera may have a removable memory card that can be removed from the camera and inserted into a memory card reader.
yes. open a window for the pictures you want to copy. then open another window (under My Computer) with the files for the SD card on the camera. simply copy and paste the ones you want to transfer. (ths is assuming you have windows, but it's the same general idea)
Most cameras, yes. Connect the camera but don't use the included software, open windows explorer and look for the camera in "My Computer". You should be able to open the camera as a "removable drive", and copy files to and from the camera the same as you would a USB drive.
You need to download the files from the digital camera by either connecting the device or inserting the SD Card into the slot, if your computer supports the last option. Then, copy the files onto a blank CD or DVD.
- Connect the camera to the computer using a USB cable. - Open "My Computer", find the camera, right click, choose "Explore" - Look in each folder for the pictures. - Once found, select all of the pictures (Select all files with Control + A), copy them (Control + C), then paste (Control + V) into a folder you would like to store them in.
I don't know about that camera specifically, but all modern digital cameras I've seen let you download pictures in at least these two ways: # Connect the USB cable that came with the camera to the camera and your computer. Then a screen my pop up that lets you look at the camera files. If not, go to "My Computer" ('Computer' on Vista) -- you should see the camera show up as a Removable Storage Device. Double click on the camera icon and then copy the pictures to your computer. # New computers and new printers often have card readers. If yours doesn't you can get one at Walmart, Best Buy, Ritz camera, etc. Remove the memory card from the camera and put it in the card reader. Then follow the procedure above for connecting to the camera.
If the camera is digital and works then you can hook it up to your computer and copy the files. If it is not then you can take it to most photo labs and ask them to put the pics directly on a CD or a thumb drive, which can then be transferred to your computer. The only disposable cameras you can load off are the EU Kodaks they have very bad picture quality