Transferring Photos to Your Computer
After connecting your camera to your PC, you can use the Scanner and Camera Wizard to download and save pictures in your My Pictures folder or any folder that you choose.Most cameras come with a cable that plugs into your PC's USB port. Windows includes and installs drivers for many camera models, sparing you the chore of manual setup. If your camera is too old (pre-2000) to understand XP's automated download features, your best bet is to buy an external memory card reader that plugs into a USB port. Insert a memory card into the reader, and Windows treats it like a floppy disk (Figure 9.1 ). Multislot readers can handle Secure Digital (SD), SmartMedia, CompactFlash, MultiMedia, Memory Stick, xD, and other formats.
Figure 9.1. If you connect a digital camera to your PC, the top icon appears in the My Computer window. If you connect a memory card reader, the bottom icon appears.

1. Connect your digital camera to your computer with the USB cable, or connect your card reader to your computer and insert a memory card.If a dialog box or the Scanner and Camera Wizard doesn't appear, see the sidebar later in this section.2. If Windows asks you what you want to do, choose Microsoft Scanner and Camera Wizard; then click OK (Figure 9.2 ).
Figure 9.2. Your choices may differ depending on the photo-management softwarewhich may have come with your camerainstalled on your computer. Check Always Use This Program for This Action (or Always Do the Selected Action) if you don't want to be nagged by this dialog box every time you download photos.

Figure 9.3. Instead of walking through the wizard (by clicking Next), you can click the link Advanced Users Only (which isn't that advanced) to work with individual photo files in Windows Explorer.

Figure 9.4. The Clear All and Select All buttons in the bottom-right corner are handy if you want to include or exclude only a few pictures. The bottom-left buttons let you rotate pictures and see their properties.
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Figure 9.5. Check Delete Pictures from My Device After Copying Them if you want to erase your camera or memory card after the transfer.

Figure 9.6. Twiddle your thumbs while Windows copies the photos to your hard drive. You can click Cancel to stop copying.
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Figure 9.7. The first two options cost money.

Figure 9.8. Before clicking Finish, you can click the link to open the folder that contains your downloaded photos.

If you find the Scanner and Camera Wizard to be cumbersome, you may prefer an option that downloads all your photos automatically to a specified folder whenever you plug in your digital camera.To transfer photos to your computer automatically:
1. With the camera connected and powered on, choose Start > My Computer.2. Right-click the camera icon; then choose Properties > Events tab.3. Adjust the settings shown in Figure 9.9 .
Figure 9.9. With these options selected, Windows automatically creates a subfolder in the specified folder (by using the current date), copies all the photos from the camera to that folder, and then erases the photos from the camera's memory or card.

Tip

Installing a Camera Driver Manually
The Scanner and Camera Wizard won't appear when you connect your camera to your PC ifIt's an older (pre-2000) camera that doesn't comply with the WIA (Windows Image Acquisition) standard, orThe camera's driver didn't come preinstalled in XP.
In either case, you can install the necessary software manually by using the CD that came with the camera:
1. Choose Start > Control Panel > Printers and Other Hardware > Scanners and Cameras.2. Below Imaging Tasks (in the task pane), click Add an Imaging Device.3. In the Scanner and Camera Installation Wizard, click Next.4. Click Have Disk.5. Insert the disk containing the camera software; then follow the onscreen instructions.
You also can install a camera driver by using Control Panel's Add Hardware Wizard. See Chapter 8.