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#241
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
PeterN wrote in news:5092ede9$0$15615
: On 10/30/2012 12:07 AM, Savageduck wrote: -- Regards, Eric Stevens Ask Siri. HAHAAHAHAHAHAHHAH!!!! Idiot! that's stating the obvious. Applesheep. |
#242
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
On Thu, 01 Nov 2012 14:44:44 -0700, nospam
wrote: In article , Eric Stevens wrote: The iPad does not have a file manager. It has a basic photo manager. Not file manager. I stand corrected. I don't experience with iPads myself, but I did recently have to help my elderly father set up his Android tablet. It's half the price and includes a full-scale file manager, so I assumed the iPad had *at least* that much functionality. No, the philosophy with many application approaches today is to obscure the file system. You do it in LIghtroom as well. Lightroom is a way for you to forget about the actual files and instead manage the *photos*. The files are just the container. that's what a lot of people don't understand. things are changing. they're stuck in their old ways of how it used to be done and *very* resistant to change. file system access is eventually going away for almost all use scenarios. dedicated apps do a much better job. users don't want to deal with individual files, they want to deal with photos, songs, movies, contacts, etc. it doesn't matter where the actual data is. it could be on the device or it could be in the cloud. I don't particularly want to deal with individual files. But I do want to deal with individual images and images in bulk. and that's where the apps come in. lightroom, for instance, lets you concentrate on the images, not the file structure. it's an app designed *for* photo management. I don't want to have to buy Lightroom just to enable me to do a block-delete of (unsynchronised) images in an iPhone. Adobe must have built something Apple-centric into Lightroom. Paintshop Pro, Nikon ViewNX and Capture NX2 are all designed only for windows and none of them can find the DCIM directory in the iPad. Windows Explorer (7) can look into the DCIM directory but the images it finds are in peculiarly named subdirectories and are presented in a fuzzy caricature of what might really be there. I was able to find a plugin for Windows Explorer 7 to enable it to properly open Nikon NEF files but so far I haven't been able to find one that does the same thing for iPad JPGs. At the moment I'm still stuck with wanting to do it in the iPad. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#243
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
On 2012-11-01 07:08:34 +0000, Sandman said:
In article , Eric Stevens wrote: And the "limit" here seems to be that Apple did not facilitate deleting thousands of photos easily enough. Seeing that this doesn't logically fall under the intended use of the iPad, I fail to see how this is an actual limit. Or rather, if that's a limit, Apple also "Limits" you in that you can't monitor NASA spacecraft launches on your iPad homescreen. I'm exaggerating, of course, and a "select all" function wouldn't really be a bad idea, but I think it falls squarely outside the scope of normal usage of an iPad. Are you saying you believe the iPad is intended to be filled but not emptied? Pretty much. I am saying that the iPad can be filled via three ways. The first is by taking pictures with it, the second is by importing photos from a camera and the third is to sync photos from your computer. There is, on the flip side, only one way to get photos OFF the iPad, and that's by selecting them one by one with your finger and hitting delete. That quite clearly says to me that focus has been on getting content ON to the iPad rather than off it. At least when using iPad-only methods. When connecting the iPad to a computer, especially a Mac, deleting all photos is the easiest thing. I think a better explanation is that everything it does is intended to pass through iTunes, with all the ramifications that that implies. As far as I'm aware, you can't delete photos from the iPad using iTunes, though. Correct me if I'm wrong. You CAN delete en masse, but ONLY the albums you synced from your computer to the iPad via iTunes in the first place. When the iPad first came out (it had no camera and no other means to connect besides WfFi and the iTunes sync, that was how photos were expected to be loaded on. -- Michael |
#244
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
In article 2012110111223295335-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom,
Savageduck wrote: there's nothing to activate. the camera roll is always there. it's where photos taken by the built-in camera, imported photos and screen shots go. Apparently it is not where image files imported via the Apple "Connect Kit" go. This I have seen for myself. internally, it's called the camera roll, which is sometimes called saved photos if the device lacks a camera. apple calls it the camera roll when discussing importing them: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4083?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US After your photos have been imported from your Camera Roll or Saved Photos, you can use iTunes to sync them back to your device. the last import and all imports albums are maintained by the photos app. other ios apps only see the camera roll, as does a computer. if an ios app wants photos imported from a card, screen shots and photos taken with the device, then it specifies the camera roll, versus the photo library or camera itself. http://developer.apple.com/library/i...t/reference/UI ImagePickerController_Class/UIImagePickerController/UIImagePickerControl ler.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40007070-CH3-DontLinkElementID_2 UIImagePickerControllerSourceTypeSavedPhotosAlbum Specifies the devicešs Camera Roll album as the source for the image picker controller. If the device does not have a camera, specifies the Saved Photos album as the source. |
#245
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
In article , Eric Stevens
wrote: Photos imported from an external camera do not go into the camera roll. yes they do. however, the photos app breaks that into last import and all imports. internally it's the camera roll. apple calls it the camera roll in discussing how to import them: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4083?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US After your photos have been imported from your Camera Roll or Saved Photos, you can use iTunes to sync them back to your device. They first go into the 'Last Import' album and are displaced to 'All Imports' by the next import when it occurs. that's still the camera roll. see above. on devices that lack an internal camera (older ipod touches, original ipad), it's called saved photos. the terms are interchangeable. when you plug an ipad (or other ios device) into a computer, all you see the camera roll, because it shows up as a camera. you don't see the rest of the ipad. You see the lot of them as far as I can tell. exactly. and that's all you see. I never had the "Import" albums until I picked up the Connect Kit yesterday to make that very check. that's a subset of the camera roll. Nope. It's separate. no it's not separate. see above. screen shots and the internal camera's photos go into the camera roll too. Nope. At least not in my iPad. then maybe you bought a chinese knock-off clone. |
#246
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
In article , Eric Stevens
wrote: if you go into an apple store, the person who will give you tech support and help resolve your issue is called an apple genius. that's their job title. And are these the people you expect to find the answer on Google? they rarely need to use google. Then they aren't the people I described as 'young geeks' and all this who-hah you stirred up with your use of the word 'genius' has been an irrelevant waste of time. then you talked to the wrong people. |
#247
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
In article , tony cooper
wrote: Nah, this is not a bash of Apple. Apple pays their people according to what they're worth. Unless, of course, the people are Chinese. apple doesn't pay anyone in china. foxconn does. foxconn makes products for a lot of companies, including the computers you own. So Apple is copying the sourcing that PC brands use? Shame! wow. you really don't understand this industry. furthermore, apple is one of the only companies trying to improve conditions there, and people line up for those jobs, because they're *better* than what they can get elsewhere in china. Logic misfire. If Apple doesn't pay them, then your statement about Apple trying to improve conditions must be false. Only if Apple has some say-so in the coolie wages can Apple improve anything. And they do. apple pays foxconn, not the individual workers. apple is a big customer of foxconn. tim cook has gone to china to visit foxconn more than once to help improve conditions. ever see michael dell at foxconn? didn't think so. |
#248
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
In article , Eric Stevens
wrote: it's a progress bar of the copy in progress, with a checkbox to delete the photos after the copy completes. click the checkbox and the photos are deleted, what you originally wanted. Aah. I thought it had started iTunes which then locked up and froze. Now, lets back up a bit. That URL is a screen shot of ... what? ... running on what machine? it's a screen shot of what happens when copying photos on a windows 7 or vista system. more he http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4083?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US |
#249
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
In article , Eric Stevens
wrote: No, the philosophy with many application approaches today is to obscure the file system. You do it in LIghtroom as well. Lightroom is a way for you to forget about the actual files and instead manage the *photos*. The files are just the container. that's what a lot of people don't understand. things are changing. they're stuck in their old ways of how it used to be done and *very* resistant to change. file system access is eventually going away for almost all use scenarios. dedicated apps do a much better job. users don't want to deal with individual files, they want to deal with photos, songs, movies, contacts, etc. it doesn't matter where the actual data is. it could be on the device or it could be in the cloud. I don't particularly want to deal with individual files. But I do want to deal with individual images and images in bulk. and that's where the apps come in. lightroom, for instance, lets you concentrate on the images, not the file structure. it's an app designed *for* photo management. I don't want to have to buy Lightroom just to enable me to do a block-delete of (unsynchronised) images in an iPhone. the discussion was about the file system and how it's eventually going to go away for the vast majority of use cases. lightroom is a very good example of that, especially since it's not from apple. nowhere have i said you had to buy lightroom to import or delete photos from an iphone, ipad or ipod touch. what i have said is that lightroom is a great app for managing photos and you can use it to import and/or delete photos, but you can also use other software too. Adobe must have built something Apple-centric into Lightroom. they didn't. lightroom imports from cameras. the ipad shows up as a camera. nothing more than that. easy to test: install lightroom 1.0 (released january, 2007), which predates the ipad by several years and in fact, predates all ios devices. lightroom 1.0 will import the photos from an ipad, iphone or ipod touch, any generation. i've done it. there is no apple-centric code for connecting with ipads in lightroom or other third party software. there doesn't need to be. Paintshop Pro, Nikon ViewNX and Capture NX2 are all designed only for windows and none of them can find the DCIM directory in the iPad. then something else is going on with your system. the ipad shows up as a standard camera. Windows Explorer (7) can look into the DCIM directory but the images it finds are in peculiarly named subdirectories and are presented in a fuzzy caricature of what might really be there. I was able to find a plugin for Windows Explorer 7 to enable it to properly open Nikon NEF files but so far I haven't been able to find one that does the same thing for iPad JPGs. they're standard jpegs. At the moment I'm still stuck with wanting to do it in the iPad. the best you can do is drag-select multiple images, but doing so with 1000s of them will not be particularly efficient. it's marginally better than individual selection. |
#250
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How do I delete photographs from an iPad?
On 2012-11-01 19:33:39 -0700, Rich said:
PeterN wrote in news:5092ede9$0$15615 : On 10/30/2012 12:07 AM, Savageduck wrote: -- Regards, Eric Stevens Ask Siri. HAHAAHAHAHAHAHHAH!!!! Idiot! that's stating the obvious. Applesheep. Says the Canuck techno-bigot to one Apple user and one Windows user. There is a non-OS consensus here. -- Regards, Savageduck |
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