Bushnell Imageview 11-1025 Owner's Manual - Page 12

Downloading the Photo/Video Files

Page 12 highlights

Downloading the Photo/Video Files 1. Connect the supplied cable to the ImageView's USB port, then directly to a main USB port on your computer-do not use front panel/keyboard USB ports or unpowered "hubs". 2. The LCD display will indicate "STO", and the ImageView will be recognized as a standard "USB Mass Storage" device. This means that the camera files can be easily viewed, edited, or copied to your hard drive, just as if they were stored on an external hard drive or a CD-ROM. (Note for Mac users: you may need to select "STO" memory access and plug in the ImageView while its LCD still displays "STO" for it to appear on the Mac desktop as an "Untitled" disk. See "Using the Operational Modes") 3. (This step is not required with recent Windows operating systems, simply use the options in the pop-up window to view, copy or edit your photos). Open My Computer or Windows Explorer. The camera will be seen as a new "Removable Disk" with an unused drive letter assigned to it. Double click this new "Disk" icon, open the "DCIM" folder inside, then the folder(s) inside that ("100MEDIA" ,etc). Your photos/ videos are the files inside-they have the prefix "SUNP" followed by a 4-digit number, as seen earlier on the camera's display when you review photos. Single clicking any file should show a small preview image. 4. Click "Edit>Select All" (or click on one photo, contol+click to select multiple photos), then "Edit>Copy to Folder" (in Windows menus). Select an existing folder on your hard drive, such as "My Pictures", or create a new folder ("Hawaii Vacation", 12

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1.
Connect the supplied cable to the ImageView’s USB port, then directly to a main
USB port on your computer±do not use front panel/keyboard USB ports or unpow±
ered “hubs”.
2.
The LCD display will indicate “STO”
,
and the ImageView will be recognized as a
standard “USB Mass Storage” device. This means that the camera files can be
easily viewed, edited, or copied to your hard drive, just as if they were stored on
an external hard drive or a CD±ROM. (Note for Mac users: you may need to select
"STO" memory access and plug in the ImageView while its LCD still displays
"STO" for it to appear on the Mac desktop as an "Untitled" disk. See "Using the
Operational Modes")
3.
(
This step is not required with recent Windows operating systems, simply use the
options in the pop-up window to view, copy or edit your photos
). Open My Computer
or Windows Explorer. The camera will be seen as a new “Removable Disk” with
an unused drive letter assigned to it. Double click this new “Disk” icon, open the
“DCIM” folder inside, then the folder(s) inside that (“100MEDIA” ,etc). Your photos/
videos are the files inside±they have the prefix “SUNP” followed by a 4±digit
number, as seen earlier on the camera’s display when you review photos. Single
clicking any file should show a small preview image.
4.
Click “Edit>Select All” (or click on one photo, contol+click to select multiple
photos), then “Edit>Copy to Folder” (in Windows menus). Select an existing folder
on your hard drive, such as “My Pictures”, or create a new folder (“Hawaii Vacation”,
Downloading the Photo/Video Files