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The best way to download pictures from your camera to your computer involves removing the memory card from the camera and plugging it into a card reader (either built-in to the computer or connected via USB or FireWire). This is likely to be faster than connecting the camera to the computer, and won't run down your camera's batteries.
Once the card is plugged in, it will appear to your computer as a removable drive. You can use the operating system's drag&drop facility to copy pictures from the card to the computer's hard drive, the same way you copy any other files. Or, despite what I said first, you can use any photo management program such as Picasa ( http://picasa.google.com ).
Look at your memory card. SD cards have a slide switch along one edge. The position farthest from the contacts locks the card, protecting it from writes. The position nearest the contacts unlocks the card.
SD cards have a slide switch along one edge. The position farthest from the metal contacts locks the card, protecting it from writes. The position nearest the contacts unlocks the card.
Yes, this means the card is faulty, a friend and myself have experienced this same phenomenon with the es55 and apacer 8 gig sdhc class 10, works fine and then nothing, no response from samsung yet!!
I'm working on the premise that you've deleted the photos from your camera memory or memory card.
If you have and used them since, its unlikely that you'll be able to retrieve them, you could have already over written them.
Its unlikely that you've deleted to your recycle bin, thats on your PC, usually already on your desktop. Camera's normally delete for good.
However, check your pc recycle bin, just double click onto it, it should be on your desk top. Once open you can choose to restore deleted files.
There are 2 file recovery programmes available for free from "filehippo.com" called "recuva" and "PC Inspector File Recovery 4.0". Download and install either of these onto your pc and recover from you camera memory to your pc (just create a folder on you desktop".
I don't know why I keep bothering to answer this question, as people tend to rate my answer as if I was responsible for the design decision, but I'll go for it again...
The ES55 was designed as a camera, storing images (and videos) to a memory card. It was not designed to stream live video to another device. If you want a webcam, you'll have to buy a webcam.
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