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When you format the memory in a digital camera, any photos that have been stored on that memory will be erased. The memory is also set up by the camera's software to store new photos.
If you're talking about a Browning Hawkeye camera, this is a very old camera used around the time of WWII. These photos could be the real deal!!
Roughly 6 photos. Get a memory card.
It depends upon the MP of your camera. The more the MP the higher the quality of the photo, and so the no of pictures that can be stored reduces. For ex, for a 2MP camera, you can store 2379 photos on a 2GB card, whereas for a 8MP camera you can only store 635 photos.
The photos are stored in a propriatary format to the camera. Only the camera can modulate and demodulate the file to and from a computer.
In one of the menus, you'll find "Quality". Use a lower one. This is the resolution. Of course, it might also be called "Resolution".
'Format' removes all data stored on the card inside the camera. You should use this option with caution as you will lose all photos stored on that card, even if they have been marked as 'protected'/'locked'. This action cannot be undone.
Digital photos are stored as a series of 1s and 0s inside a digital camera or computer. This signal is decoded back into the photo and printed the same way a word document is printed.
This can depend on which file type the photo is, how many pixels are in the photos and also the brightness and amount of colour in the photos. Lets say you have a 5 megapixel camera which makes it into a JPEG file, this would mean an average picture would be around 1.6MB. 700MB / 1.6MB = 437.5 Photos
sd card
Yes
photos