That answer is going to depend on the picture quality or compression you select. I suggest searching online for manufacturer's specs on the camera in question. The manufacturer will often provide a table that shows the number of files for different settings. If you're not shooting in RAW or TIF mode, the MB used per shot and shots per card will vary somewhat according to image detail and sometimes the ISO setting as well. So what you get will be a guideline.
If it is a digital camera that utilises an SD card
Use a card reader with your computer. Or go to Whalgreens and print them out.
Depends on the camera manufacturer. SD card, xD card Memory Stick Pro to name a few.
As soon as you take a photo with a digital camera it is on the memory card. You may never see it if you don't view it on the camera or download it to your computer. If you don't erase the memory cardthe photos will remain on it.
Depending on your computer, you can either use a USB cord, which comes with most digital cameras, or your memory card.
Most digital cameras have a feature that will allow you to view your photos right from your camera's display screen!
First of all you must have your camera card in a card reader attached to your computer. Then go to the folder where to photos are and select the ones you want to send and select send to: Select the drive where the card reader is plugged into and SEND.
The Fuji s9000 Sandisk compact fash card is used to store digital photos that are taken on a Fuji camera. A person can then insert the card to load photos to their computer.
2 megapixel (1,600 x 1,200) {| ! Quality ! File size (kb) ! 64MB ! 128MB ! 256MB ! 512MB! 1GB | High 1,002 61 122 244 523 1,046 Medium 558 109 219 440 940 1,879 Low 278 217 435 868 1,886 3,772 |}
In my opinion putting the memory card directly in the computer works the best.
The Canon EOS 40D is professional camera used to take high definition digital photos with a lens mechanism manufactured in Japan. It is able to store these photos on a SD card.
My understanding is that an SD card is an SD card, no matter what the use is. The difference is what data is stored on it. (eg. Photos or music)