Put the disc in the computer with the small triangle going in tip-first on top. Go to your Desktop by minimizing all windows. Double click "My Computer" on the desktop. The floppy disc is the A: drive. So double click on "A:" or "A: 3 1/2 inch floppy", whichever it shows. Then just drag all of the files on the floppy disc onto the Desktop or another folder.
-DJ Craig
First, you'll need a wire that connects the camera with the USB port, or a device that has an insert for the memory card for the camera that connects it to the USB port in the computer. Then, you must open up iPhoto. iPhoto will automatically recognize it after loading the pictures you already have stored in there. It will say 'ready to import (insert number here) items' and then you allow it to proceed, and it will load the pictures and save it into iPhoto.
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
Download the picture from your camera or memory card to the computer. Attach the saved file to an email and send it. == == == == == == === === First, you need a program to acquire the pictures once you connect the digital camera (DC) to your computer (there is one included in Windows). When you run the program, you'll have to select which pictures you want to acquire. Once they are acquired, you make sure the pictures are there and then you disconnect your DC. Create a new email message and input all the information as usual. Then click on "Add an Attachment." You will be redirected to a page where you'll have to browse to the file and select it. Then send the message as usual. Open your email software, click on "Create a new email" and then follow the instructions as per the web-based emailing instructions.
Do you have a digital camera ? The digital camera takes a picture when you push the button, then translates a description of the image into a load of digital data, which is stored in the camera until you decide to move it somewhere. Then you can dump the data to a laptop, put it on a CD or DVD, e-mail it to your mother, or send it through a data-cable to a printer. The satellite simply has a digital camera on board. It takes a picture whenever ground controllers tell it to, or when its on-board computer decides it's time for a snap. The digital camera translates a description of the image into a load of digital data, which is stored in the satellite until the ground controllers decide to move it somewhere. Then the data is radio-transmitted to earth, where the controllers can store it in a laptop, put it on a CD or DVD, e-mail it to their mother, send it through a data-cable to a printer, or send it via the web to the local TV station for the 11:00 news.
Convert AVI video to your digital camera, you should make sure that the video format which can playable on your digital camera. Such as some camera support TS or MOV format for my digital camera. After U know your digital camera`s video format, convert it with Aimersoft video converter, it helps you convert moving videos between all popular formats, enjoy the highest conversion quality on the market! Steps: 1. Download this software and run it. 2. Load your AVI video 3. Select the suitable format for your digital camera as putout format, then click "Convert" to begin your convertion. Over.
Yes, it takes longer to load from a floppy disk.
A computer tech store should be able to help load the pictures off of a floppy disc. After the pictures have been uploaded to the computer and reloaded on a CD the pictures can be print anywhere that prints pictures.
Pictures contain a large amount of digital data.
IBM, it was designed to boot load microcode (µIPL in IBM terminology) for their System/370 computers introduced in 1971. The original floppy discs used by IBM were 8 inch diameter and had a capacity of only 80,000 bytes. The IBM engineer that designed the disc drive that the System/370 used to read microcode from these discs was Alan Shugart. He eventually left IBM to start his own disc drive company.
Usually you just put a memory card into the slot. You might try reading the instructions that came with the frame. This question is far too general to answer here.
1. Put the pictures on a computer. 2. Put your memory card in the computer (might need an adapter if your computer doesn't have a correct slot) 3. copy the pictures onto the memory card. 4.look at the pictures.
the could load when they can't read says no data
You need some sort of boot media to load DOS. In addition to floppy drives, you can also use a CD-ROM, USB Flash drive, or boot over a network.
Buy a new game disc
No, Cameras are ment for takin pictures or video, soon probaly they will but, for now they havent thought that far. Yes it can all you have to do is take a photo or film on a digital camra and then up load it onto your computer
1971 on the IBM System/370, to load the microcode.
CDR CDRW DVDR DVDRW Blueray