Technology3 mins ago
cameras & computers
4 Answers
hi, new to answer bank, new to digital cameras and new to computers, phew! My question is I have a nikon camera and a fuji finepix, I have installed the software supplied with each camera but find my 'pics are flying everywhere! I think I pefer using the nikon software so do I uninstall the finepix? Will it damage the camera if I use the nikon connections on the finepix? Hope someone can help, thank you.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If they both use the same cable, it shouldn't matter at all.
What many people do, myself included, is use a memory card reader that reads the memory card inside the camera directly. There's no need to connect the camera itself and turn it on to transfer your pictures, and you don't need to install any software or drivers to make your camera work. The card will just appear like another folder on your computer, and you can drag your pictures into somewhere inside your computer wherever you want them.
You can then use whatever program you want to view and edit your pictures, like Google's free Picasa:
http://picasa.google.com/
What many people do, myself included, is use a memory card reader that reads the memory card inside the camera directly. There's no need to connect the camera itself and turn it on to transfer your pictures, and you don't need to install any software or drivers to make your camera work. The card will just appear like another folder on your computer, and you can drag your pictures into somewhere inside your computer wherever you want them.
You can then use whatever program you want to view and edit your pictures, like Google's free Picasa:
http://picasa.google.com/
The software supplied with digital cameras basically serves two distinct functions. The first is to enable the transfer of images from the camera to the PC. The second is to allow you to manipulate the images (e.g. to improve brightness, contrast, colour balance etc).
The latter functions will work with all types of images, from all sources. (i.e. as far as image manipulation is concerned you can use either of the supplied programs or, probably better anyway, something completely different).
As far as the downloading programs are concerned, they tend to be specifically designed to work with individual makes of cameras, so you might not be able to get one of these programs to work with the 'wrong' camera. (I doubt that you'd actually damage a camera; you just wouldn't be able to transfer the images).
The downloading programs are usually a pain in the @rse anyway. You usually have to have the camera turned on (which either means draining the battery or using a mains adapter). Additionally, transfer can be very slow. Hardly anyone actually uses them. A far better alternative is to buy a USB card reader. These used to be rather expensive but they're now easily available, quite cheaply, for a few pounds. (Try Asda or Tesco Extra). Using one of these card readers means that the media card, which has your pictures on, is just seen as an extra drive and you can 'drag & drop' (or 'copy & paste') images just as you would any other files.
So my advice is to ignore all of the software which came with your cameras. Buy a USB card reader for data transfer and then use something like IrfanView or Picasa for image manipulation (They're both free):
http://www.irfanview.com/
http://picasa.google.com/
Chris
The latter functions will work with all types of images, from all sources. (i.e. as far as image manipulation is concerned you can use either of the supplied programs or, probably better anyway, something completely different).
As far as the downloading programs are concerned, they tend to be specifically designed to work with individual makes of cameras, so you might not be able to get one of these programs to work with the 'wrong' camera. (I doubt that you'd actually damage a camera; you just wouldn't be able to transfer the images).
The downloading programs are usually a pain in the @rse anyway. You usually have to have the camera turned on (which either means draining the battery or using a mains adapter). Additionally, transfer can be very slow. Hardly anyone actually uses them. A far better alternative is to buy a USB card reader. These used to be rather expensive but they're now easily available, quite cheaply, for a few pounds. (Try Asda or Tesco Extra). Using one of these card readers means that the media card, which has your pictures on, is just seen as an extra drive and you can 'drag & drop' (or 'copy & paste') images just as you would any other files.
So my advice is to ignore all of the software which came with your cameras. Buy a USB card reader for data transfer and then use something like IrfanView or Picasa for image manipulation (They're both free):
http://www.irfanview.com/
http://picasa.google.com/
Chris