How do you move photos NOT taken with ipod ONTO the ipod?

How do you move photos NOT taken with ipod touch ONTO the ipod touch - click and drag isn't working. Thanks.

You can sync them via the iPod's Photos configuration pane in iTunes.  See here for more information and instructions.
iOS and iPod: Syncing photos using iTunes
B-rock

Similar Messages

  • Importing photos not taken with iPhone on the Mac

    Hello everyone,
    I would like to import my photos from iPhone - but those not taken WITH iPhone.
    I'll explain: I have photos on my PC. I can sync them to the iPhone. I now would like to import these into iPhoto. Under Windows, I can import as soon as I plug in the phone or access its disk. How can I do the same in my Mac?
    Thanks,
    Beto.

    You cannot import photos from the iPhone that were transferred to the iPhone from a computer via the iTunes sync process with a PC or a Mac. Photos transferred from a computer via the iTunes sync process is a one way transfer process only - from the computer to the iPhone. Photos transferred from a computer are optimized for viewing on the iPhone as part of the iTunes sync/transfer process - the original resolution of these photos is reduced on the iPhone, which is why the transfer of these photos in the opposite direction is not supported.
    There are a number of other ways to transfer the full resolution photos from one computer to another.

  • HELP! How do I get photos not taken on iphone onto new computer??

    My computer was stolen and I replaced it. All of my pictures that were on my computer are on my iPhone. Does anyone know how to get the pictures from my iPhone that were downloaded from my old computer onto my new one?? Please help! These are the only copies of very precious pictures of my daughter. Any suggestions appreciated. (I have tried to sync regularly but it only syncs photos that i took with the phone)

    thank you guys for your suggestions. I thought of that as well. It's gonna take some serious time but it'll work. Thanks SOOO much!!!!!!

  • HT1229 How do you transfer photos to external backup and keep the photos in events with event name or with description name. Each time I have tried to transfer them they only transfer with a jpg number so you don't know what photos are what.

    How do you transfer photos to external backup and keep the photos in events with event name or with description name. Each time I have tried to transfer them they only transfer with a jpg number so you don't know what photos are what. When you have several thousand photos it is difficult to determined what is what.
    Why does iPhoto have the ability to put photos in events and to give them descriptions if it doesn't transfer this info with the photo. I want to back my photos up to an external drive.

    The simplest way to achieve what you want is to back up the iPhoto Library. That will get everything.
    You sem to be exporting from iPhoto to the Finder. The Finder does not have the same organisation capabilities as iPhoto. If you're going to do that you need to understand some of the differences between the two.
    Event Name will become  Folder Name.
    'Description Name' I guess is the Title you give the Photo
    Jpeg Number is the File Name assigned by your camera.
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    Set your Kind to Jpeg
    Select your preferred Quality
    Check the Boxes at 'Titles and Descriptions' and Location Information
    Under FIlename select 'Use Title'
    Click on Export. In the Next Window choose a New Folder as your export destination and then Name that as you prefer
    Regards
    TD

  • How do you move photos from I photo to aperture?

    How do you move photos from I photo to aperture? I've downloaded onto i photo but having difficulty moving events over

    What version of iPhoto? And of Aperture?
    If you have Aperture 3.3 and iPhoto '11 version 9.3 or later you simply use the same library - http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5260?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US
    LN

  • How do you move photo's from Iphoto to keynote or powerpoint?

    How do you move photo's from iphoto to keynote or powerpoint? How do you insert them into slides?

    iPhoto '08, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.3)
    Your signature suggests you are asking about iPhoto on a mac:
    To use the Media Browser in "Pages" as Douglas McLaughlin suggest:
    Click "Media" in the toolbar, select the "Photos" tab in the "Media" browser panel, select "iPhoto"; for example:

  • This is my first mac i have 2 hard drives installed how do i move photos or documents from one to the other

    i just bought my first imac i have 2 seperate drives on it. how do i move photos and documents from one to the other.

    This is our resident iPhoto guru, Terence Devlin's, advice:
    You can move your iPhoto Library to an external or secondary internal disk:
    1. Quit iPhoto
    2. Copy the iPhoto Library Folder as an entity from your Pictures Folder to the External Disk.
    3. Hold down the option (or alt) key while launching iPhoto. From the resulting menu select 'Choose Library' and navigate to the new location. From that point on this will be the default location of your library.
    4. Test the library and when you're sure all is well, trash the one on your internal HD to free up space.

  • How do you burn photos to a disc so that the titles are shown and they can be used in windows?

    How do you burn photos to a disc so that the titles are shown and they can be used in windows?
    do

    Are they in iPhoto?
    Select the pics in the iPhoto Window and use the File -> Export command. In the resulting window, at File Name, select 'Use Title'. Also check the boxes at Title and Keywords, and they will be written to the IPTC metdata of the files. Complete the export to a folder on the desktop and iPhoto will export the photos using the Title as a Filename. Burn that folder with the Finder.
    Regards
    TD

  • My PC is not recognizing  iPod gen4/5 and trying to upload CDs not sold by iTunes onto the iPod.

    My PC is not recognizing one of our 2 iPod gen4/5 and I'm trying to upload CDs not sold by iTunes onto the iPod. How do I get this done. Thanks for your help

    See these for Windows.
    iTunes 7 doesn't recognize the iPod.
    Your Windows PC doesn't recognize iPod.
    iPod appears in Windows Explorer but does not appear in iTunes.
    iPod does not appear in iTunes.
    Fast user switching in Windows XP is not supported.
    Strange iPod behavior.
    And these for Mac.
    iPod doesn't appear in iTunes or on the Mac desktop.
    iPod does not appear in iPod Updater or iTunes in Mac OS X.
    iPod appears on the Mac OS X desktop but not in iTunes.
    Try to restore it in disk mode.
    Putting iPod into disk mode.

  • I need to free up space on my hard drive. How do you move photo's to my external?

    I need to free up space on my hard drive in order to complete a new update.  How do I move photo's from my macbook air to my external hard drive?

    You need to backup your Iphoto library to Time Machine first (if you havent already done so)
    THEN you need to copy your Iphoto library to another HD before deleting from your Macbook ,....because 1 copy only is = NO COPY in case of HD failure!
    To move an iPhoto liobrary -
    quit iPhoto and drag the iPhoto library intact as a single entity to the external drive - depress the option key and launch iPhoto using the "select library" option to point to the new location on the external drive - fully test it and then trash the old library on the internal drive (test one more time prior to emptying the trash)
    And be sure that the External drive is formatted Mac OS extended (journaled) (iPhoto does not work with drives with other formats) and that it is always available prior to launching iPhoto   from LarryHN
    As to your AIr and its SSD =
    You need to change the premise of your SSD use.
    see here:
    Your Solid State Drive and having enough space inside your Macbook Air & Pro
    Solid State Drive usage premise, or the “more space / upgrade SSD” question
    There have been questions posed and positions taken by many people who are trying to use their Macbook Air or Pro’s solid state drive (SSD) as a mass media storage device, for either pictures, videos, massive music collections or all three combined; but this should not be the working premise of a ‘limited’ SSD and its use.
    In which, it’s the case of those users with either 128GB, 256GB, or even 512GB of internal SSD space, that have or are running “out of space”, that questions are raised. The immediate premise of some users can sometimes be “(how to / if) upgrading my SSD” when in fact in nearly all instances another approach is the logical and sensible one that needs to be looked into and exercised.
    Any Macbook containing a SSD should be idealized as a ‘working platform’ notebook containing all your applications, documents, and weekly or bi-weekly necessary files. All collections of media files such as pictures, music, and videos, unless directly needed should be kept off the notebook and on an external hard drive or likewise. While the ‘working platform’ premise is also the case with larger internal conventional hard drives of 1TB+, its implementation isn't as critical except in terms of data protection.
    Realistically, you should at most coordinate roughly 20 to 25% of your total SSD space to all audio-video personal use media (picture / music / video collections), leaving the remaining amount on an external HD.
    Nobody should consider any notebook a data storage device at any time under any circumstance, rather a data creation, sending, and manipulation device; and in the case of a SSD, this is more important for purposes of having sufficient working space on the SSD and reducing SSD ‘bloat’ in which cases someone is wrongly attempting to use the SSD space as a large media storage nexus.
    The rare exception to the collective usage and premise of SSD use in which a much larger SSD is truly needed are for those in video and photography professions that require both the extremely fast speeds of the SSD and the onboard storage for large and or many video and photography files. However this also falls under the premise of a ‘working platform’ for such peoples rather than the intent of many who are using the SSD as passive and static data storage for media files very infrequently needed or accessed.
    All on-notebook data collections should be logically approached as to necessity, and evaluated as to whether it is active or passive data that likely doesn’t need to be on the notebook, allocations of space-percentages to as-needed work and use, apportioning space for your entertainment media, and questioning whether it should it be on the notebook for more than short-term consumption.
    Considerations should be made in the mind of any user in differentiating the necessary system data (System hub) comprising the Mac OSX, applications, necessary documents that both must and should be on your internal SSD, and that of the users personal data (Data hub) comprising created files, pictures, music, videos, PDF files, data created or being created and otherwise, that likely unless being used soon or often should be parked on an external hard drive for consumption, or temporarily loading onto the internal SSD.
    You both can and should purchase whichever SSD size you need or see fit, but even in the case of the largest of SSD, unless use-considerations are made, and SSD spaces are allocated as should be the case indicated above, one can easily and immediately run into this quandary of “needing more internal SSD space”, in which instance a different approach in usage must then be implemented.
    However it is almost always the case, that such large media files are wanted to be stored internally rather than actually needed, in which case the external HD is both prudent as well as necessary. Additionally costs per MB are infinitely less on an external HD than an internal SSD in any consideration of data expansion needs.
    A Professional Example
    In the case of a Macbook Air or Macbook Pro Retina with ‘limited’ storage on the SSD, this distinction becomes more important in that in an ever rapidly increasing file-size world, you keep vital large media files, pics, video, PDF collections, music off your SSD and archived on external storage, for sake of the necessary room for your system to have free space to operate, store future applications and general workspace. 
    You should also never be put in the position of considering “deleting things” on your Macbook SSD in order to ‘make space’. This is especially what your external HD is for.
    Professionals who create and import very large amounts of data have almost no change in the available space on their notebooks internal SSD because they are constantly archiving data to arrays of external or networked HD.
    Or in the case of the consumer this means you keep folders for large imported or created data and you ritually offload and archive this data for safekeeping, not only to safeguard the data in case your Macbook has a SSD crash, or gets stolen, but importantly in keeping the ‘breathing room’ open for your notebook to operate, expand, create files, add applications, for your APPS to create temp files, and for general operation.
    Slim USB3 1TB external hard drive
    External Hard Drives
    External hard drives are both extremely cheap and regardless of the size of your internal SSD (or even internal hard drive if the case), you need an external hard drive with your SSD equipped Macbook for several reasons:
    1. Data backup and protection.
    2. Redundancy for important data.
    3. Necessitated ideal space for large media files for collections of pictures, videos, and music etc.
    While ever changing in price, typical portable 2.5” external hard drives in USB3 run roughly $65 for 1TB or $120 for 2TB small portable USB3 hard drives. Such drives range in thickness between 5mm and 15mm, with recent improvements in storage of 500GB drives in 5mm profiles.
    There is almost no premise in which a small 12mm thick 1 Terabyte USB hard drive cannot be taken along with any Macbook as an external large storage extension inside any Macbook carry case or pouch. Typically such external HD profiles are not much bigger than a deck of cards.
    External hard drives are a foregone necessity for purchase with any Macbook for at the very least Time Machine backups, data redundancies, and ideally for large media storage.

  • How do I move photos from Pictures in Finder to the iPhotoLibrary?

    I have a Mac OS X 10.9.4. How do I move photos I have downloaded and saved in the Pictures folder in Finder to the iPhotoLibrary? Thanks.

    Hello, Bflogrl. 
    Thank you for visiting Apple Support Communities. 
    Here is an article that will walk you through importing photos located in the Finder. 
    iPhoto '11: Import photos from your hard disk or other computers
    http://support.apple.com/kb/PH2357
    Cheers,
    Jason H. 

  • How do you transfer photos from an old iPhone to the new one??

    How do you transfer photos from an old iPhone to your new one??

    Photos in your camera roll are included in the iPhone backup, & restoring your new phone from the backup of your old phone, as described here, will restore these photos to your new phone:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2109
    Photos synced to your phone are not included in any iPhone backup. If you're talking about photos that were synced to your old phone, just sync them to your new phone.

  • All photos NOT taken with my iphone have vanished from iphoto

    I have just found that all pictures in iphoto except those taken with my iPhone have simply gone. I have searched for them but they don't appear to be anywhere on the machine. Furthermore, I have two cameras that I have downloaded images from quite happily for years from and now my Macbook can't download from them. It doesn't recognise one and just says there's a fault and it can't download images from the other.
    Can anyone help? 

    The preceding reply is only accurate in part.
    You, too, can influence the way your photos look in an email message read on your friend's computer. You do not say how you enclose the photos as attachments, so I hope you are using the email button at the bottom of the iPhoto window (after having selected the one or more photos you wish to send). Clicking the email button should bring up a dialogue window, asking you to select the Size of enclosure you wish to send: using the drop-down menu, you can select between Small, Medium, Large, and Actual size. The size you select will depend on the eventual use that is to be made of the photos: if this is simply for viewing in the email message, then Small and Medium are appropriate; if the photos are to be viewed more closely, or printed at a relatively small size, then Large might be a better choice; if the photos are to be further processed, or printed in rather better quality, then Actual size is what is needed (actually, you might then simply prefer to send the originals).
    The other selection boxes in the dialogue window are to allow you to include textual information, embedded in the photo file(s). Such information should already have been entered in the Information panel in iPhoto for each photo. Usually, you can leave these selection boxes unchecked.

  • How do you move photos from iPod to new computer?

    Just got a new computer with Windows 7 (I think) after using an old (really old) one. All my photos are on my iPod and the FAQ says they can be moved from it to the new computer if I enabled disk use (which I did). But it doesn't say how to actually move them. Can anybody help?

    1.Turn on your computer. Close any applications that might slow the photo transfer.
    2.Connect your iPod to your computer with the cord that came with your iPod. Make sure you have turned on the iPod.
    3.Open iTunes. Wait for iTunes to register that your iPod is connected. If the screen does not register that a connection, disconnect the iPod and try again.
    4.Click on the "Photos" tab below your iPod on iTunes. Look through the photos stored on your iPod.
    5.Drag photos from the photos folder on your iPod to the desktop. You may also drag these pictures to a photo editing application, like Photoshop or Photosmart. Move any other images from your iPod to your computer.
    Read more: [How to Move or Transfer Photos From iPod to a Computer|http://www.softwarebbs.com/wiki/Howto_transfer_iPod_photos_from_iPod_toPC]

  • How do you move changes from your project developments into the maintenance development system?

    Good day colleagues.
    We are in the process of introducing retrofit, and the picture is clear for us, generally speaking, to retrofit the project landscape with the changes done in the maintenance landscape.
    What about the other way around? We mean, when the project is set to Go Live, we understand the transports will be all added, e.g. to the Production System buffer to be moved there via Maintenance Cycle, based on the way we defined the project and the logical component being used.
    However, how do you feed those project transports to your Maintenance Development System using ChaRM?  or do you do that Manually?  We doubt. Copying Production back into Development?  no way !!!
    How do you establish that?  We have a sort of idea but the documents about retrofit only seem to talk about moving transports one way, as far as we have found.
    Many thanks for any feedback.
    Juan Carlos

    Hi Piyush.
    I apologize for a late close on this questioning about moving projects back into the maintenance stream.
    Basically there are 2 solutions as far as we know:
    1. What Vivek mentions, which is performing a cutover and repacking the project transports into 2 transports in the maintenance stream:  A workbench and a customizing.   In that sense, at the end of the day you end up moving just 2 transports to the maintenance stream up to Production.   They contain all your project objects.  Thanks to Vivek, again.
    This is a very practical and interesting approach.  The only reason we did not adopt it, is based on the fact that if by any chance we encounter an issue with a project transport object in the maintenance stream (Dev or QA), now that all is bundled together, we may be stuck right at the time weare getting ready to GoLive.  How tough is going to be that issue? how easy and quick to fix?how much would that affect the whole project time frame?   Those questions made us decide to option 2.
    2.  What we are doing is that at cutover we move at the same time all project transports to the transport buffer of each of the maintenance stream systems (Dev, QA, and Prod).   We first open the gate to move the transports to Dev and we test, then to QA and we test, as well.  If there may be an issue, and the issue can not be quickly resolved by the project team, we can go up to the extreme of using a new feature introduced in ChaRM in SP10, if we are not wrong, but definitely available in SP12.  That feature provides a way to selectively decide which transports of the release are to Go Live and which ones do not, although we have no had to use that feature, yet, but it is there.
    We do not see any risk on adding the transports to the maintenance buffers at the same time.  There are ways to control the systems that are open for receiving transports, and the project phases, which guarantees no room for error.  There have to be deliberate actions taken (more than one in our case), to wrongly move a project to GoLive before its time comes.
    That is more or less the scenario Piyush.    
    Hope that explains the scenario.  So far no decision on really publishing as a blog.  It seems not to be written on stone, as consulting with different companies, each adds its own flavor to the recipe and shuffle ideas to get to what they are looking for and makes them happy.
    Juan

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