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3. e LCD display will indicate “Mass Storage”, and the Instant Replay will be recognized as a standard “USB Mass
Storage” device. is 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.
4. (is step is not required with Windows XP, simply use the options in the pop-up window to view, copy or edit your
photos). Open My Computer or Windows Explorer. e camera will be seen as a new “Removable Disk” named
“Bushnell”, 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
“PICT__” followed by a 4-digit number, same as seen earlier on the camera’s display when you review photos. Still
photos have the file extension (suffix) “.jpg”, video files “.avi”. Single clicking any file should show a small preview
image.
5. Click “Edit>Select All” (or click on one photo, contol+click to select multiple photos), then “Edit>Copy to
Folder” (in Windows menus). In Windows XP, a window will open with a list of options (copy, edit, email, etc).
Select an existing folder on your hard drive, such as “My Pictures”, or create a new folder (“Smith Family 2007
Vacation”, etc), then click “OK” to transfer copies of the photo files you want.
6. After the photos are transferred to your hard drive, you can disconnect the camera. Windows 2000 may produce
a screen warning that you have disconnected a USB device without stopping or ejecting the “disk” first (your
photo files will not be harmed). If so, check the box that adds an icon to your system tray or taskbar. en next
time you finish transferring photos, you can click that icon first, and “Stop the USB Mass Storage Device” before
disconnecting the camera. (On Mac computers, you should “eject” the “disk” that appeared on your desktop when the
camera was connected.)
Transferring e Photos & Videos to Your PC continued