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Are you sure the camera is not just saving pictures to its built-in memory? With no card in the camera, try to view the pictures on the camera screen. If they show up, then that's what is happening.
Turning off a camera before an image is completely written to the memory card.
Removing the memory card from a camera while an image is being written to the card.
Removing the card from a memory card reader while files are still being transferred to a computer.
Batteries conking out as files are being transfered directly from the camera to a computer. Note: always make sure you have fully charged batteries before transferring images.
Removing the card from a card reader while folders and files from the card are open on a computer.
Opening, deleting, renaming or moving files on the card while its contents are open on a computer.
Using a memory card which has not been formatted in the camera. Use the delete/erase function when needed, however a card should be regularly formatted.
Formatting a card in a computer instead of the camera.
Inserting a second memory card into a card reader before closing and removing the first when viewing images on the card from a computer.
Taking photos when camera batteries are nearly empty.
Taking photos too rapidly so the camera can not complete writing one image before starting the next.
Continually shooting and deleting, shooting and deleting images when the card is full.
Letting a memory card get too full before downloading the images to a computer or storage device. Cards that are too full may overwrite the card headers.
Using a memory card from one camera in a different camera without formatting it in the new camera first.
Best way is to download the pictures to a computer through a card reader (optional). The blue blank screen could be deleted images using the garbage can icon. Retrieving those images can be done but it cost to have a recovery program used and there is no grantee that the images can be extracted because the card my have been written over or formatted. Once you have your images saved to a computer the memory card should be loaded bak into the camera and the memory card formatted to give a clean working surface for the camera to write new files to.
Its a problem of your card. your memory card may infected by virus so scan the card by updated virusfree conputer. If there is nothing gonna find then remember one more thing that all memory card have a life time. If the card corss the limit of lifetime image capacity that time its happend like these way.
Thanks, i am waiting for your feed back & if you satisfied then thumps me please.
If you have USB cable for your camera, just connect it to the computer and you will receive a transfer window, just click ok then pictures will be uploaded to your computer.
you may also use card reader then insert your card, connect it to the computer then the same procedure as above.
There is really only one sure way to transfer images from a digital camera to your computer and that is with a card reader ($15-20). Plugging the camera directly into the computer is one of the most problematic areas in digital cameras. It is so much easier to go buy a card reader and plug it into the USB port on your computer. Then remove the memory card from your camera and plug it into the card reader. You can now click and drag or use any normal method to transfer your images. I would also advise a free download called Picasa3 supplied by Google. It will keep your images organized and assist you as your transfer images using your new card reader. It does a whole lot of other things your will like also. Best Wishes.
It all depends, first you would plug the camera into the computer with the usb cable that should have come with the camera. This is where things start to differ. Some cameras are recognized and installed automatically when they're plugged in so you would just run through the wizard that pops up and then the camera would appear in the Control Panel under Printers and Other Hardware and then under Scanners and Cameras. Sometimes it will also show up in my computer at the bottom. That's the easy way. If that doesn't work for your camera then you'll likely have to install the software that came on a cd with your camera and use that to get the pictures off. That's a bit harder.
There is an alternate way of downloading images from the memory card from the camera. Get a USB memory card reader, remove the memory card from the camera, insert it into the card reader, then plug the card reader into the USB port of your computer. You will now see card reader as an external memory device, open the folder and copy your photos onto your hard drive.
in some cases we have found that if there is a virus on the card and if you try to read it directly on a computer having anti virus activated, the computer shows card as a blank. As the camera software is not effected by the window based virus, it can read the data. Try connecting the camera to the computer via USB. As the widows xp or higher versions do not require drivers or the camera software to be loaded to recognise the camera you can directly transfer the data from your card.
If your SD memory card contains more than 1,000 images, the camera will display "Communication Error". Use a card reader (if available) to import your images into the computer, or see about having some CD's made at a photofinishing business.
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