Adobe Standard or Embedded Make default

How do I make Embedded the default instead of Adobe Standard in the develop module camera calibration.

Jeffrey Lewis wrote:
ssprengel, thank you very much - I didn't realise you meant to change the setting in camera raw, I tried as you suggested and it worked.
Thanks to everyone who made suggestions.
Changing in ACR/PS will not affect Lightroom accept for images you take to ACR/PS. ACR and Lightroom operate independently.
Where you need to change it is in the Develop Module bottom right
Then set the Develop settings you want as default or as a Preset. I would recommend setting as default for the camera.

Similar Messages

  • Strong colour shift when reselecting Adobe Standard camera profile

    I'm having this curious problem with Nikon V1 NEFs (raw files) in Lightroom 4 beta.
    In the develop module, Adobe Standard is selected as the default camera profile. If I switch to one of the other profiles (for the V1, the options are Camera Landscape, Neutral, Portrait, Standard, and Vivid) and then switch back to Adobe Standard, I get a strong color shift in the blues, which move towards teal. It looks like a white balance shift, but the white balance settings themselves don't change.
    I've attached three screenshots, the first showing an untouched file with Adobe Standard selected as the default profile in the develop module, then with the Camera Vivid profile selected, and then with Adobe Standard reselected. Besides changing the profile, there are no edits on this file: all I've done is import it, put it in a collection, switch to the develop module, select the Camera Vivid profile and then reselect Adobe Standard.
    The color shift happens regardless of which camera profile I pick before reslecting Adobe Standard. Interestingly, while the colors are off in the develop module, they're correct in the library module. Switching back and forth between library and develop doesn't fix the problem -- as long as Adobe Standard has been reselected in develop, the colors are off in that module but correct in library. The only way I've found to clear the color shift is to click reset in develop. Select another camera profile, though, and then reselect Adobe Standard and the problem comes right back.

    Yes. This is a bug that has been reported/fixed after the public beta build was made ready. Somehow it did not make it to the final public beta release note. The current workaround is to relaunch LR4 or
    a) Copy Settings (check all except Calibration),
    b) Reset,
    c) Paste Settings.
    This will invalidate some internal memory cache that went stale.
    -Simon

  • Why does the Adobe Standard profile make a mess of old NEF files?

    Recently I've been reprocessing some old NEF files taken with the Nikon D50 camera years ago, and I was startled to find that the Adobe Standard camera profile does a bad job on them: the photos come out muddy-looking, really unacceptable, with too much yellow and magenta. I can fix the problem by choosing the Camera Standard profile, which gives acceptable results. However, I believe that Adobe Standard is generally recommended by Adobe, and I wonder what the problem is here. Does anyone know?
    I currently use a Nikon D7000, and Adobe Standard seems to work well enough with that camera.
    Later: After checking and comparing more carefully, I think that perhaps I prefer Camera Standard with the D7000 too. Adobe Standard is certainly acceptable with the D7000, but Camera Standard gives blue skies of clearer blue, and less exaggerated reds. So the best fix for me is probably to make Camera Standard my default for all cameras.
    Looking around the Web, I see various people complaining about too much magenta with Adobe Standard, although other people are happy with it.
    Message was edited by: Jonathan Palfrey

    Yammer P, thanks for the input.  I have been working with the DNG Profile Editor since the first version was available.  I also started using the Passport software when it was first available.  I first worked on a profile for the D200 and after many attempts I finally have one that works great.  The Camera profiles did not exist at that time and the D200 does not have Picture Control Profiles, I believe that was first available with the D300.  Adobe did generate Picture Control Profiles for the D200 and they are also available in Nikon Capture NX2. 
    I currently have a D700, and have spent a lot of time working on profiles for this camera.  I have used the DNG Profile Editor's Chart Tab to generate profiles for most of the Camera Profiles and Adobe Standard.  I find that Adobe Standard profile is brighter than the Camera profiles by about 0.25 stop.  After working on this for about 2 years I have decided to use the Camera Neutral with a modified tone curve and slight reduction in saturation as my starting point and no changes in hue.  I also generated a modified Picture Control profile for Neutral using the Nikon Picture Control software that has the same characteristics and loaded it into the camera.  I get good agreement between jpg's from the camera and the nef file that opens in ACR without adjustments.   The tone curve I used only has three points - the In/out values are 27/22, 127/127, 228/233 and saturation was set to -5. 
    I don't understand what Adobe changed when they genrated the Adobe Standard Profile instead of the ACR4.x versions, but I like the ACR4.x version better.  

  • Adobe Standard 8 as default PDF viewer, except in websites

    Hello
    I am trying to get Adobe Standard 8 to deploy as the default application when dealing with PDFs, but have Adobe Reader X as the embedded PDF viewer in Internet Explorer.
    I have been successful in getting both applications to install, and X be the default viewer in Internet Explorer, however I can't seem to get 8 to be the default PDF application for opening files on the desktop.  I have played around with a number of different combinations of customization opens through the avaliable tools, but I can't seem to get it to land on the specific configuration I'm looking for.
    Is there a "quick" registry fix I can apply to impliment this scenario?
    Thanks,
    Tim

    Hi,
    What you're trying to do is unsupported. See http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/874/cpsid_87424.html.
    Only X and 9.x have that capability.
    Ben

  • Using Adobe Standard as default application

    I had to download Adobe Reader for a document that I wanted to open and read.  After doing this, the reader has become the default for opening all PDFs instead of my Adobe Standard.  Now, in order to open a PDF in standard so I can work on it, I have to find the Adobe Standard in my program files, open it and then search for the PDF I want to open.  How can I remake Adobe Standard my default program for opening all PDFs when I click on the PDF?

    Hi Judycurry,
    Kindly follow the below mentioned steps to change the file association for Windows :-
    Go to Control Panel from the “Start” menu.
    Under Programs, choose Default Programs
    Choose Set Associations (Vista), or Associate a file type or protocol with a program. (Windows 7)
    Find “.pdf” in the list of file associations.
    Select Change Program, and choose Acrobat Standard from the list.
    Click Ok
    Thanks

  • Adobe plugin removed. Defaults set to Adobe Standard. I get Firefox demand to install plugin. How can I force Adobe to use Standard?

    Adobe Reader won't open certain (large) Adobe files.
    > I set all Firefox defaults to Adobe Standard. Firefox still uses Adobe Reader.
    > Uninstalled Adobe Reader. Uninstalled Firefox Adobe plugin.
    > When I try to open an Adobe File, Firefox now says to install Adobe Plugin.
    ... catch - 22.
    What can I do to force Firefox to use Adobe Standard? (none of the moderator solutions appear to work)

    RESOLUTION (seems not logical, but this worked):
    Firefox would do nothing other than ask me to install the Firefox plugin for Adobe, which I accepted. This process leads to re-installing Adobe Reader. After installing Adobe Reader, all of the defaults that I previously had set to use Adobe Standard were re-set during the Adobe Reader installation to use Adobe Reader interally in Firefox.
    After re-installing, I was able to load the document that previously I was unable to load (using Adobe Reader inside Firefox). I changed all of the Adobe defaults (under TOOLS/OPTIONS) to "always use Adobe Standard" instead of "Use Adobe Reader (default)". I was then able to open the document using Adobe Standard.
    It appears that the following process solved the problem:
    > uninstall Adobe Reader
    > reinstall Adobe Reader (and the Firefox Adobe plugin)
    > change the defaults from "Use Adobe Reader (default)" to "Adobe Standard [release number]"
    Note: I have Firefox 21.0 installed, and Adobe Reader XI 11.0.3 installed prior to, and after, this issue.

  • What is Adobe Standard and the other camera profiles?

    OK, so i'm using my Canon 5d mark II, shooting RAW in the Neutral picture style.  When I load the photo into Lightroom, at the bottom under Camera Calibration the program shows that by default it has loaded the photograph using the Adobe Standard camera profile.  My question is: Is Lightroom taking the end result of the RAW data being shot with the Neutral picture style and loading it into Lightroom where it translates the photograph (RAW + Neutral picture style) using Adobe Standard?  Or is Lightroom taking the photograph (RAW + Neutral picture style) and overriding the Neutral picture style setting in my camera and replacing it with another picture style it calls Adobe Standard?
    Another and potentially easier to understand way of asking the question would be if I shot two photographs in RAW, one with the Neutral picture style set in my camera and one with the Landscape setting, and then loaded them into Lightroom using Adobe Standard camera profile, would the two photographs look any different?
    Sorry, I am new to digital photography and all adobe programs, and would greatly appreciate the help of a veteran.

    The photos would look exactly the same. The picture style that your camera is set on makes no difference to the raw image. That picture style is carried in your raw file as just a tag that tells Canon's raw converter how to interpret the data. Adobe doesn't use that information.
    It's up to you to choose the profile that meets your artistic desires.
    Hal

  • Adobe Customization Wizard X doesn't set Adobe Reader X to be default when customizing Acrobat X

    I've recently started working with Adobe Customization Wizard X.
    I've got Adobe Reader X customized and it's already installed all computers. Now, I'm working on customizing Adobe Acrobat X. During the customization, I only have the following 2 options:
    1. Installer will decide which product will be the default
    2. Make Acrobat the default PDF viewer
    Choosing the 1st option, makes Acrobat as the default PDF viewer. In other words, I don't get an option to keep Adobe Reader X as the default on the existing computer.
    Found a blog in Adobe site which suggests running Adobe Reader installation again after Acrobat is installed. Although it works, it just isn't a good solution (my opinion).
    http://blogs.adobe.com/pdfitmatters/2011/03/installing-acrobat-x-and-reader-x-on-the-same- machine.html
    Can you advise what're the registry setting that I can set during the Acrobat X customization so that it doesn't become the default PDF viewer.
    Regards,
    Parvez
    Message was edited by: Parvez Akkas
    Included the hyperlink to the blog that was mentioned

    Hi Ben,
    Here's what I am trying to accomplish I had Acrobat Standard v10.1.4 scripted so I can deploy it to a Citrix Server (XENAPP6) via SCCM 2007 I have at least 50 licenses of Acrobat Standard deployed to 50 users. All of our Citrix Servers have Adobe Reader v10.* installed as our default pdf viewer. There are other apps that are deployed to this Citrix Server and I wanted to make sure that pdf files open on Adobe Reader instead of Acrobat Standard.
    I had to change the installer tables directly so I don't have to get it re-scripted to use this command line. Is it a best practice not to change the isntaller table?
    msiexec /i "\\source\Acrobat10\AcroStan.msi" transforms="\\source\Acrobat10\AcroStan.mst" LEAVE_PDFOWNERSHIP=”YES” /qb /norestart
    Thanks a lot for your help I'm looking forward to hear from you.
    Regards,
    William

  • Adobe Standard profile for 5D mark II includes tone curve?

    In ACR, I see a "Point" tone curve with the "Adobe Standard" profile on Canon 5d Mark II files.
    I've never seen a tone curve before on standard profiles for other cameras. I understand that tone curves are included in the camera standard, faithful, portrait and landscape profiles in attempt to match the in-camera jpegs. But I thought the Adobe Standard profiles were supposed to target only color (hue/sat) and leave tone up to the user.
    Can someone verify that your system includes a point tone curve on 5D2 raws. Maybe my config is messed up.

    Dear Eric,
    I have Photoshop/Bridge CS3 and Camera Raw Version 4.5.0.175 on Windows XP (SP2).
    To "see" tone curves I launch Bridge, navigate to a folder, double-click a raw or DNG file and get the ACR window.
    In the ACR window, I click on the "Camera Calibration" tab and navigate through the various Camera Profiles.
    For each profile, I click on the "Tone Curve" tab and view both the "Parametric" and "Point" curves.
    For canon 5D Mark II DNG files there is always a "Medium Contrast" Point Curve, under every camera profile. I do not have a Canon 1Ds Mark III, but I have downloaded a sample raw file and converted it to DNG. For this DNG I also see a Medium Contrast Point Curve under every profile.
    For my Canon 20D and Canon 1Ds raw or DNG files the Point and Parametric curves are flat under every camera profile.
    When I downloaded the latest DNG converter and DNG Profile Editor, I'm reasonably confident I also downloaded and installed the most current camera profiles.
    For Canon 5D2 files I see the following profiles: Adobe Standard, Camera Faithful, Camera Landscape, Camera Neutral, Camera Portrait, and Camera Standard, in that order.
    For the Canon 1DS Mark III image I see all those profiles, plus ACR 4.4 and ACR 4.3
    For Canon 20D files I see all those profiles, plus ACR 4.4 and ACR 2.4
    To make sure I'm not picking up any presets, I have invoked the pop-up menu in ACR and selected "Reset Camera Raw Defaults". Then, for each file viewed in ACR I checked the pop-up menu again to make sure "Camera Raw Defaults" was checked.
    And a reminder, all this was after I had created a number of custom profiles from Macbeth Color Checker images using the DNG Profile Editor. Those custom profiles created a problem with Bridge previews, so I removed all of them before viewing Point Curves as described above. Still hoping to get some feedback on the Bridge preview problem I described in this message:
    http://www.adobeforums.com/webx/.3bb6a869.59b790c8

  • No Adobe Standard Profiles Found

    Discovered this on a file passed from Lightroom 4.3 to Photoshop CS6 (Up to Date)
    The file from Lightroom looks great and is using the Adobe Standard Profile. When passed to Photoshop, using the Edit in functionality, it is acquiring a yellow tint. Upon examination of the file by opening with ACR, it is having a custom 7D profile (created through the Profile Creator) applied on import instead of the Adobe Standard.
    When I attempt to open the file directly to PS CS6 and use ACR to apply the correct Camera Profile, only the 7D custom profile is available. Adobe Standard and all the Canon Shooting mode profiles are missing.
    Lightroom has all the profiles available-ACR does not.
    Macbook Retina (3 weeks old)  Mountain Lion 10.8.2 (Admin Account), LR 4.3, CS6, 13.1.2, ACR 7.3.0.1 (All products Creative Cloud)
    I (and Lightroom) can see the profiles in the Library>Application Support folder but ACR cannot.
    Anyone else see this-solution?
    Rikk

    Rikk Flohr wrote:
    Ultimately, as I understand ACR, everything was moved to the User-level last major version upgrade.
    I'm running ACR 7.3 on Mac 10.6.8 and in my Root level/Library/Application Support/Adobe there is a subfolder that is named CameraRaw and in that folder are two additional subfolders; CameraProfiles and LensProfiles. As far as I know, nothing about the location of Adobe supplied color and lens profiles has changed for many versions. The User level folder is designed to hold only user made color and lens profiles.
    I don't know why your profiles were relocated but it does seem that something is wrong, somewhere...the only differences between our system is the 10.6.8 vs 10.8.2. I checked on my laptop running 10.8.2 and the correct folders are correctly installed in the root level. The use level Library is actually hidden by default (which is really stupid of Apple) but I ran a Terminal command to make it visible. The only profiles in my user level Library are my custom profiles for color and lenses I've made.

  • Severe Magenta Cast Some Cameras Adobe Standard

    Adobe Standard
    Generic Daylight Profile for Canon G10 Created by me with a Macbeth Chart and the DNG Profile Editor (not of this scene specifically) and Adobe Standard as the Base Profile.
    Images from a Canon Powershot G10.  Both have exactly the exactly the the same settings.  White Balance Auto and then Auto Tone with Brightness set back to default of 50.
    Download DNG file here
    Download Generic Daylight Profile for G10 used in this example here.
    Happens with my 5D (original) as well.  Does not happen with Leica M9 and can't say for any other cameras at this time.

    Actually, I wouldn't expect that much difference between most camera sensors under the same controlled conditions.  I suspect if you divided up the Adobe Standard profiles into sensors and other factors more meaningful than make and model, the differences might be more obvious.
    So, for example, I see little difference between a Nikon D80 and a Canon (which uses the same APC sensor technology [down to the manufacturer], I think) there is little difference. But when I compare Nikon and Ricoh I see a much more obvious difference. The fact is that the image guts of most DSLRs these days are made from one of at most three manufacturers.  The majority come from two. A few others that I recall had similar sensors and image processing engines also seemed pretty similar.
    The Adobe Standard is not about trying to pull the wool over our eyes.  It is about establishing a baseline for raw image manipulation.  The fact that most sensors and bodies will really respond pretty closely aside, there could be outliers. Making the standard based on the make and model allows for a more natural way to handle presets and what-not from the point of an application.  The fact that, under the covers, most cameras really respond quite similarly in similar median conditions is not all that interesting.
    It is at the extreme edges of image reproduction that the makes, models and even specific bodies will be most drastic (which is why getting to know your camera in extreme shooting conditions is important, and why being able to make your own profiles is so powerful.)
    At any rate, if your particular make and model (or even specific body) is not to your liking, it is pretty easy to make your own standard.  Because I don't have a studio, I've gone ahead and made "standards" like based on things like time of day (for natural light) or "my living room" which sometimes give me an easy out. No one needs to use Adobe Standard. Heck, if you really like the in-camera settings and Adobe profiling doesn't work then it may be that the vendor software is the way to go. Double heck, some professionals still think this whole raw thing is stupid and shoot JPEG. This solves a whole raft of problems -- decisions one doesn't even have to make.  Just get exposure right and go!

  • Comenting and stamp tools greyed out Adobe Standard XI

    We have an application where the customer needs to have at least Adobe Standard in order to open pdf's in the web browser, comment and mark them up, and save using our adobe toolbar which saves back to a server. We have users who have installed and used XI standard with no problems however this one user cannot view the commenting and markups within the PDF, it is greyed out.
    I have tried unchecking the "Display in Read Mode by default" under internet in preferences but this does not work. I will add that we had a contact at Adobe who gave us this reg file that would make sure the comment and markups toolbar stayed visible in our application.
    Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Adobe\Adobe Acrobat\9.0\Annots\cPrefs]
    "bprintCommentPopups"=dword:00000000
    "bshowAnnotToolsWhenNoCollab"=dword:00000001
    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Adobe\Adobe Acrobat\9.0\Annots\cPrefs\cfavoriteStamps]
    I have tried something similiar but the keys are different for Adobe 11 so I need a little help. Thanks!
    Tracy

    Can you please clarify the instruction on how to place the following into the registry (if possible step by step). That will be great help. Thank you.
    Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Adobe\Adobe Acrobat\11.0\Annots\cPrefs]
    "bprintCommentPopups"=dword:00000000
    "bshowAnnotToolsWhenNoCollab"=dword:00000001
    "tlastViewedStampCategory"="Favorite Stamps"
    "dalwaysZoomZoom"="0.000000"
    "tlastUsedStamp"="#3MDRaCYQB0Ciy106Wa0OvB"
    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Adobe\Adobe Acrobat\11.0\Annots]
    "bStampsPaletteInvisible"=dword:00000001
    "bshowAnnotToolsWhenNoCollab"=dword:00000001

  • Can not view all the thumbnails in version 9 adobe standard

    Hello,
    I recently installed adobe standard 9 running parallel with adobe standard 5.
    My end user is claiming of the view setting for patient data. She can not scroll all the way to the bottom
    as she could in adobe 5. She can see all the thumbnails minus the last row. I have changed the prefereces to show the same
    as adobe 5. However I can not get the correct settting to make it right for her.
    Any adivse or trouble shoot steps would be appreciated. Adobe said to update the product, I have done that last night.

    How do I do that?
    Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2010 10:10:01 -0700
    From: [email protected]
    To: [email address deleted by host]
    Subject: Acrobat Windows Can not view all the thumbnails in version 9 adobe standard
    Change the size of the thumbnails, change the size of the thumbnails window, or upgrade Acrobat X.
    >

  • How do I set Adobe Flash Player as the default program to open SWF files?

    Basic Overview
    I have this working fine at my home laptop, however I need this working for projects at school.
    Whenever I want to open an SWF file at home, I simply double click it and open it in Adobe Flash Player (Adobe Flash Player 10.0 r22) and I have no problems!
    However, when I am at school I have to run SWF files within Internet Explorer, Adobe Flash Player IS installed, but the SWF files are not opened in that directly, they are opened within Internet Explorer.
    At Home
    If I right click an SWF file at home and select "Open With" and then "Choose Default Program...", Adobe Flash Player is already there under the name 'Adobe Flash Player 10.0 r22', so I can simply select it as the default. (On my home laptop)
    At School
    At school if go to "Open With" and then "Choose Default Program...", Adobe Flash Player IS NOT there, only Internet Explorer and some other programs in the other programs box. (On my school laptop)
    Question
    How can I assign Adobe Flash Player as the default program for opening SWF files (on my school laptop)? If I select "Browse..." and go to C:\WINDOWS\System32\Macromed\Flash there is no file with a description of 'Adobe Flash Player 10.0 r22', is the file for the actual program located somewhere else or have I just no looked properly in the folder?
    I really need these files opening in Adobe Flash Player directly and not in Internet Explorer (I know you can set the view to 100% and have it sized correctly)
    Thanks you to everyone who helps!
    -Charlie! (Yes I know I don't need to write this in a forum)

    The standard Flash Player is a browser add-on, and not a standalone player.  So what actually opens when you open an SWF file at home?  Flash Player Projector?
    If so, you also need to download it at your school, from http://www.adobe.com/support/flashplayer/downloads.html, then do the file association.

  • What is the rationale behind the "Adobe Standard" color calibration profile?

    Hi! I'm trying to figure out how to make the most of the various color calibration profiles Adobe offers for my cameras with Lightroom 5. I do understand the purpose of the camera-specific options--they're designed to help approach camera JPEG processing mode colors. And they work wonderfully--they're very helpful!
    But I don't really understand the purpose of the "Adobe Standard" calibration option. What is it for? Why does it look the way it looks? Has it been designed to ease certain processing goals? To enhance certain colors or tonal combinations? Is it designed to be more accurate than the manufacturer profiles in some way? What can I do with "Adobe Standard" that I can't do with one of the camera-specific calibration options?
    I would find it *extremely* helpful if someone who's involved with the engineering behind Lightroom's color (or anyone else who's especially knowledgeable about Lightroom's design) might talk a little bit about why "Adobe Standard" looks the way it looks. What's it for? To what purposes can I leverage it?
    Thanks so much!

    MarkJoseph wrote:
    I would find it *extremely* helpful if someone who's involved with the engineering behind Lightroom's color (or anyone else who's especially knowledgeable about Lightroom's design) might talk a little bit about why "Adobe Standard" looks the way it looks. What's it for? To what purposes can I leverage it?         
    Adobe Stadnard is the name for the individual profiles Adobe builds for each camera it receives. A new camera ships, Adobe gets their hands on one and builds a profile with that sample. It isn't suppose to mimic the in-camera JPEG settings, I don't believe it's supposed to mimic anything but instead produce what is (and quotes are super important in this context) the most 'accurate' color response from the target they use to create the profile. But here's the rub. Not all cameras from the same make and model behave identically. Adobe simply can't get piles of the same body and build then average that response. So they provide a means for you to build your own custom DNG camera profile and for differing illuminates. So if you want to leverage it, you'd get a target (MacBeth 24 patch, X-rite Passport) and build your own custom profile. It can really help depending on how your sensor deviates from the sensor Adobe got to build their profiles.
    For more info on DNG profiles and rolling your own:
    In this 30 minute video, we’ll look into the creation and use of DNG camera profiles in three raw converters. The video covers:
    What are DNG camera profiles, how do they differ from ICC camera profiles.
    Misconceptions about DNG camera profiles.
    Just when, and why do you need to build custom DNG camera profiles?
    How to build custom DNG camera profiles using the X-rite Passport software.
    The role of various illuminants on camera sensors and DNG camera profiles.
    Dual Illuminant DNG camera profiles.
    Examples of usage of DNG camera profiles in Lightroom, ACR, and Iridient Developer.
    Low Rez (YouTube):
    http://youtu.be/_fikTm8XIt4
    High Rez (download):
    http://www.digitaldog.net/files/DNG%20Camera%20profile%20video.mov

Maybe you are looking for

  • Export in 4.0.2 is not working

    Hello, We are currently upgrading APEX 3.2.0 to 4.0.2 and so far everything works except the Export feature. When I try to Export a report to a csv output, the Excel sheet does not contain any data. I went into the Report Attributes and in the "Repor

  • Error while running script HyperV - Dash Board - VM and Storage Report

    Hi Team, I am getting below error while running HyperV dashoboard monitor & storage report script from Technet script library. HyperV - Dash Board - VM and Storage Report Finished processing VM  - xxxx Processing VM - xxxxx Get-VHD : Unable to cast C

  • How to use getMetaData() method in EL?

    <%     DbUtils db = new DbUtils(); %> <c:set var="tableName" value="${param('tableName')}" /> <c:set var="idColumnName" value="${db.getIdColumnName(${tableName})}" />getIdColumnName() is a method of DbUtils class which is a help class. It seems that

  • IPhoto book ordering problem (error)

    when ordering my book, a window appears stating that an "error occured when trying to connect to Apple Online store. Try again". Trying again does not help. Any suggestions?

  • HT1911 i forgot the answers to my security questions how do i find the answers?

    it wont let me buy songs or apps without answering these but i dont know the answers....