The display being white can be due to failure of the LCD or the CCD which is the optical sensor of the camera. So to confirm check the older picture to be seen on the display. Confirm this by checking the card on your PC. If the images/picture is seen to be of good quality, then the LCD can be faulty, fault on the linking cable or the control board.
However if the older images are seen well then the LCD is working correctly and the fault can be failure of the CCD- charge coupled device in the camera. If you have accidently exposed the camera directly to high intensity light / sunlight, then it is possible that it is damaged. Remove the battery and keep the camera aside to reset and try as a last resort. Get estimate before you decide. It will be good to have it checked at the authorised service as you do not have to run around for spares.
Please click on the link for tips to replace a LCD
Here are some troubleshooting steps that you can try that may (or may not) correct your problem. They only seem to work for less than 40% of the lens errors, but if the camera is out of warranty (or repair cost approaches that of the camera), they're worth that try. Some of the later steps do involve some risk to the camera, so carefully weigh your options before deciding to conduct them. As you stated that the lens is bent, you may need to start with Fix 7 first to straighten the lens first, before proceeding with the other fixes.
I'm not sure what it can be, software not properly installed, corrupted, or whatever.
You can get a card reader for a few dollars and use it instead. Easier and faster. Download the photos and videos to a folder in your laptop. This will not affect the quality or sequence. After you've downloaded everything, replace the card in your camera and format the card.
Deleting the pictures while connected to the computer may corrupt the card format.
Please remember to format it in your camera. In one click the card will be empty and ready for more.
Investigate the cause of Error 0x80010108 later, right? In the meantime you can process the images as usual.
A CCD problem would explain the lines on your pictures and the lines on the LCD (since the CCD is used to feed the live image).
If seen on both your pc monitor as well as the camera's LCD then it's
likely a CCD issue and it's no wonder that it will be more expensive
than buying a new digicam. This is why you need to be exceptionally
careful when taking care of your camera since most are uber sensitive to
being damaged by the slightest miss-handling.
In order to correct this issue, the repair facility needs to replace the CCD. This is not something you may do on your own.
CCD image sensor problem occurs in this and other brands; in the next link, for example, check a recall on the Sony T1 and other cameras built around 2002-2004 with a CCD chip problem. The recall is good til 3/31/2009. Only $15 shipping charge ( I dont know if they keep this price ). Here is the link: Sony-Asia/Support/Announcement
The date and time (and a lot more) are automatically stored with every picture in its EXIF metadata. Any photo viewing/editing program should be able to display this data. To print this data, please consult the documentation for whatever program you're using to print your pictures. Depending on the program and printer you may print the date on the image, in the margins, or on the back.
Correct. The camera lets you put the picture on its right side, on its left side, upside-down, or right-side up. It will NOT let you tilt the picture on a diagonal.
The date and time (and a lot more) are stored with every picture in its EXIF metadata. Any photo viewing/editing program should be able to display this data. To print this data, please consult the documentation for whatever program you're using to print your pictures. Depending on the program and printer you may print the date on the image, in the margins, or on the back.
The memory card supplied with this computer is only 16 Mbytes, enough to store just three pictures at the highest resolution. You will need to obtain a much larger card than this to store a lot of snaps, or you could store more at a lower resolution.
There is also a movie mode that stores different files. These will take up space but they won't be listed as photos. You will need to look for movies to see if part of the disk is being used this way.
If you are using a different card that has been in a computer, perhaps there are other files on the card that don't show because they are not recognized by the camera. Try connecting the card to a card reader in a computer and looking at all the directories.
If you are using a memory card, take no more pics until you've recovered the photos, take the card out of the camera. This is to reduce the chance of you overwriting some of your "lost" photos. There are many good freeware photo recovery software options that are available to help you recover your photos. This blog article reviews and outlines several of the better ones. AFTER you've recovered your photos, format your card IN YOUR CAMERA to prevent this from happening again.
Is there a mode to use the built in memory vs. the memory card? And, you're using up the built in memory and not using the card? That's the way my kodak is, anyway. And, also my Sony Cyber shot.