Importing using a card reader, the last few photos on my SD card don't show up in Photos. If I import the rest of the photos, take the card out, then put the card back in, the last photos have been showing up. It's been a pain, but at least it's worked. Today, though, not even that work-around is working. Why won't my card reader register the last several photos on import?

It is an M1 mac by any chance? I know that the M1 macs are unable to connect to some cameras via usb that older Macs could connect to. It could also be an incompatibility introduced in later versions of MacOS.


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One workaround may be to use the image capture app to first download images to a folder, and then import to Photos from there. Other than that, you may be stuck with using a card reader until an update solves the problem.

The files are fine. They just aren't getting "seen" by the iMac. I have two cards that I interchange, and the same thing happens with both. If I have, say 150 photos on a card, the iMac will import about 144 of them. Six will be left on the card. My work-around has been to eject the card, take it out of the reader for 5 seconds, then re-insert the card and import the remaining few images, which would then appear in Photos.

Last night, that trick wasn't working, so I took several more photos on that card in my office, re-inserted, and still nothing. Then I ejected and re-inserted again, and it worked. I was able to get the last few images off the card.

This iMac is only about four months old. On my old iMac, I imported my photos from this same camera and same cards using the direct usb connection to my camera. When I try doing this on the new iMac, using the same cable I used before, the back of my camera says "Connecting to PC..." But then it never connects. On my old iMac, it would immediately connect and give me the choice of importing to PC or PictBridge. I would import to PC and it would go smoothly. I've never been able to do this with the new iMac, but I did have a card reader already, so I have just been doing it that way.

Anyway, there's nothing wrong with the cards, and the photos that don't appear are not damaged when I'm eventually able to import them. I hope this additional information helps in diagnosing the problem. Thanks so much for your time and expertise!

Not an M1 then. As I said - it could be a recent bug in MacOS. The only other suggestion I have (other than the workaround mentioned above - have you tried that by the way) would be to reformat the cards IN CAMERA.

Some people don't ever delete images from their SD cards - they just buy another when one is full. That full card is your backup and can be filed away in case you need the originals again in the future.

When you use the camera data cable you also use the batteries, I had an old camera that really drained the batteries when using the data connection (a set of batteries lasted a few days of shooting or about 30 minutes of data connection) - I expect most cameras are better but I haven't used the data cable since.

For SD cards - most laptops have a built in card readers, lots of printers also have card readers, the USB reader that's always connected to my desktop computer right now cost me about $5 - why bother connecting the data cable when I already have a card reader connected.

For CF cards - I've heard (my camera only has an SD card) a good card reader will be so much faster than the camera you'll never ask this question again (a new generation reader from one of the leading memory card brands - not my $5 one).

I prefer using the faster method of removing the card, but I've had problems with two cameras using this method. It seems to wear out the contacts on some cards and/or camera slots which can be an expensive repair job.

When using my D100 I've almost always used the data cable but I'm never in a rush. When I started out with the camera I bought a CompactFlash card reader or two but none of them ever worked very well for me, possibly becasue they were low quality items.

I would say it's better to use the memory card as going through USB turns out to be much slower in my experience. You also end up having to keep the camera on in order to use USB to transfer pictures.

b) memory card is inaccessible when camera is in use. Panasonic DMC-FZ200 has its battery-and-memory door located that you have no chance to open it when on a tripod. And it's so close to the mount screw that it's not even accessible when just a quick release plate is on the camera. Putting the camera in a lens clamp helps.

d) half of the time you forget putting the memory card back into the camera, leading to an unpleasant surprise when you next want to use it. So for just checking/getting a single photograph, the cable might be easiest.

e) with a large size microSD card in a MemoryStick adapter, the first use in-camera after working on it on the computer takes a really really long startup time in the DSC-R1. No idea what the camera is doing then, likely some integrity check.

Cards need to be properly formatted before that can be used. Memory cards may have some default formatting scheme on them when you first open the packaging. The formatting that might initially be present are remnants of factory testing, and needs to be completely wiped.

I think that camera uses SD style cards so make sure the LOCK tab is in the correct position for the camera to write to the card. That lock tab should be at the end closest to the terminals of the card.

Just to point out that "quick view" and "live view" are auto focus settings for live view and do not apply if you are shooting with the viewfinder. In any case, that should not prevent writing to the card. It might prevent the camera from focusing that will prevent the camera from taking an image, but any image you do take should still write to the card.

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