Your camera is connecting in Windows 8 because there is some internal sensor. To fix this you need to look for the relevant drivers.
You can get a cable for your camera which would connect to a computer USB port.
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.
Sadly, Windows Movie Maker cannot do this. If you would like a clearer picture, I suggest a camera with Higher Resolutions or a higher Pixel number. Personally I would buy a Kodak Camera, but that's just me.
Of course you can. They would not be of much use if you couldn't.
You would need a U-8 USB cable to connect a laptop to a Kodak easyshare camera. The fitting on this cable is a little smaller than the standard USB 2.0. A U-8 USB cable is easily available from suppliers such as Amazon.
The easiest way to use a video camera on a computer is get a TV card put in your computer, i.e. Wintv products. They come as usb or pci cards, i would go for the pci card type myself as usb can be a twitchy connection. The way i would connect the camera would be ,, connect a video recorder or DVD recorder to the card and run a camera off the inputs of the recorder. then tune the video or DVD recorder and use its aux control and then your cam output will be visible.This would be recognised as a video source anyway which means you could use the camera for social networking too.
The old fashioned camera light bulbs would burst because they contained magnesium. The magnesium would cause the bulb to break when it was used up.
You would have to make use of a computer that connects both the WiMax usb and a network cable to connect to the switch. Then, in windows, you need to bridge the 2 connections.
what would cause all power windows to only work once in awhile and defroster to go out on a 1997 dodge intrepid
Although you theoretically could fashion a way to physically connect the two devices, there is no communication protocol between the two, therefore the entire exercise would be futile.
Connect the camera to your Mac and run the iMovie program. iMovie should recognise your camera and you can then import your video.
It's probably a loose connection, but it might be the switch.