well first of all you put the memory card in the card reader not the CD drive so you should probably open up the case and get it out of there
Yes.
To transfer photos from your Nikon D3300 to your Mac, you can use a USB cable to connect the camera to your computer. Once connected, your Mac should recognize the camera as a storage device, allowing you to access and transfer the photos to your computer. Alternatively, you can also remove the memory card from the camera and insert it into a card reader on your Mac to transfer the photos.
Some Macintosh Computers made in the last 5 years have an in built memeory card read/writer. If you you are using the internal reader then inserting the card into the drive, waiting until the card appears onscreen and using the click-and-drag method to copy files from the Mac desktop to the memory card will work. Should you have an earlier Mac that lacks the internal card drive then pluging the drive cable into the back of the Mac will allow access to the card. Mac are a bit different to other machines in that draging a disk icon to the trash can will eject the disk
One would need to buy a USB Flash card reader. they are cheap enough. dont forget to look for a "compatible with MAC" Logo.
Very few Vivitar cameras come with Mac OS X support the software is often for Windows computers. Try connecting the camera to the Mac with the USB cable, turn the camera on, and see if iPhoto or the Image Capture application recognises it. If the camera has a removable memory card then the addition of a card reader may help. Specific details of camera and version of Mac OS X would help.
You need to be more specific, if you mean a phone, camera or games console style sandisk like memory card, then you need to find the files in My computer, or the mac equivilant
The camera has to have a memory card. If your laptop is somewhat new, it has a slot to pop in memory cards. If you don't have a memory card slot on your laptop or the memory card won't fit in it, get a card reader. I found one that's not too expensive at Best Buy. You can also order one online. Most card readers plug in with a USB.
Yes, if your computer has a memory card reader that your particular memory card will fit into and work with. The card reader will allow your computer to read and write to the memory card as though it were any other disk drive, and you can even use the same Windows Explorer to do so.
My best guess would be to use the usb data cord that may have come with your camera to load pics to your computer. After that,I suggest uploading the pics from the comp to your sd card via usb card reader(you can get them on ebay.ca for $10 including shipping) or at The Source for $20.Hope this helps someone. On my Nikon Coolpix L11, you put your sd card in, hit menu, then copy. It will then ask you if you want to copy from camera to sd, or reverse. Then it will ask you to choose one photo or select all. It works great, hope it works on your camera too.
get a mr. PC
A digital camera will usually have a USB socket that can be plugged into the Mac. Once connected most cameras will be recognised by the iPhoto or Image Capture applications. If there is no USB socket then if the memory card is removable it can be inserted into a card reader which will connect to the Mac with a USB cable.
Make a file backup folder on your computer and copy all those photos to it and call it a by new name. Now delete the bad or poor pixs from the orignal photo file . Select the pictues remaining one by one or other and send them to your camera which is listed as a drive. Or select each pix -copy them - and paste them to the camera drive storage. Practice this first- after making a file you copied all into.