I'm considering buying a Canon PowerShot S45, and I was wondering if it's possible to have the camera appear as a drive/volume on your computer? As inn, the camera will be come "removable device z:\" .. I'm borrowing a S40 from a co-worker, and I downloaded the USB software from Canon's webpage. Seemed the pictures had to be transferred using special software..?

What OS version are you using? What software did you download from Canon? If you are running Windows 2000 or XP and install the Camera driver it will show up as a drive labeled Canon Powershot S45 and you can copy/move the files to any other harddrives.


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Hi all.

I'm considering buying a Canon PowerShot S45, and I was wondering

if it's possible to have the camera appear as a drive/volume on

your computer? As inn, the camera will be come "removable device

z:\" .. I'm borrowing a S40 from a co-worker, and I downloaded the

USB software from Canon's webpage. Seemed the pictures had to be

transferred using special software..?

The manual states and warns (multiple times) not to connect the camera to the PC without first installing the software. My USB compact flash reader shows up as a "z:" drive, and then I import the images into the Canon software (the only image browser I have so far), but I have not tried transferring images with audio attached.

The manual also describes that the camera has a picture transfer protocal (PTP) communications setting. This is for use if the Canon driver and software are not installed on Windows XP or Mac OSX systems ONLY. The special leaflet concerning PTP communictaions says that sound attached to images may not work using this mode and if you have problems with your images or sound , revert to using the Canon software.

The S45 is my first digital camera (I'm a photography newbie), I'm glad I chose it over the S230. It seems to be the perfect bridge between portability and functionality. I recommend a 256 MB compact flash card and a spare battery. I fit 144 various size images (mostly large, all superfine) on a 128 MB compact flash card, using the flash about 10% of the time (outdoor and daylight), LCD screen all the time, and that combined with the 7 minutes of download time wasted 1 (broken in) battery. If I had a 256 MB card and a spare battery, I wouldn't have had to stop taking pictures. The S45 seems very easy to use and I would recommend this camera to anyone that was looking for this type of camera.

What OS version are you using? What software did you download from

Canon? If you are running Windows 2000 or XP and install the Camera

driver it will show up as a drive labeled Canon Powershot S45 and

you can copy/move the files to any other harddrives.

Eric, is correct in stating the driver must not be installed after the camera has already been connected. Canon techs did say that the native peripheral drivers in XP will install and configure the camera if you don't install the driver first. Disconnect the camera and uninstall the camera driver. Go into device manager and remove the camera system driver and once that is done, reinstall the driver, reboot and then connect the camera. After that is complete the camera will become a logical drive on your Windows Explorer and it will function as a local disk.

The manual states and warns (multiple times) not to connect the

camera to the PC without first installing the software. My USB

compact flash reader shows up as a "z:" drive, and then I import

the images into the Canon software (the only image browser I have

so far), but I have not tried transferring images with audio

attached.

The manual also describes that the camera has a picture transfer

protocal (PTP) communications setting. This is for use if the Canon

driver and software are not installed on Windows XP or Mac OSX

systems ONLY. The special leaflet concerning PTP communictaions

says that sound attached to images may not work using this mode and

if you have problems with your images or sound , revert to using

the Canon software.

The S45 is my first digital camera (I'm a photography newbie), I'm

glad I chose it over the S230. It seems to be the perfect bridge

between portability and functionality. I recommend a 256 MB compact

flash card and a spare battery. I fit 144 various size images

(mostly large, all superfine) on a 128 MB compact flash card, using

the flash about 10% of the time (outdoor and daylight), LCD screen

all the time, and that combined with the 7 minutes of download time

wasted 1 (broken in) battery. If I had a 256 MB card and a spare

battery, I wouldn't have had to stop taking pictures. The S45 seems

very easy to use and I would recommend this camera to anyone that

was looking for this type of camera.

I uninstalled the camera (it had to be connected to show up in device manager), and I uninstalled the Canon USB driver. I then rebooted my PC, and installed the Canon USB driver, without first connecting the camera. After the driver was installed, I again rebooted the PC. After the reboot, I plugged in the camera. Ofcourse, the wizards in Windows XP started their "thing", and proceeded to install the camera again...

I made a screenshot, and this is how the S40 appears under "My Computer"..

Eric, is correct in stating the driver must not be installed after

the camera has already been connected. Canon techs did say that the

native peripheral drivers in XP will install and configure the

camera if you don't install the driver first. Disconnect the camera

and uninstall the camera driver. Go into device manager and remove

the camera system driver and once that is done, reinstall the

driver, reboot and then connect the camera. After that is complete

the camera will become a logical drive on your Windows Explorer and

it will function as a local disk.

The LowePro PhotoSport Outdoor is a camera pack for photographers who also need a well-designed daypack for hiking and other outdoor use. If that sounds like you, the PhotoSport Outdoor may be a great choice, but as with any hybrid product, there are a few tradeoffs.

If you want a compact camera that produces great quality photos without the hassle of changing lenses, there are plenty of choices available for every budget. Read on to find out which portable enthusiast compacts are our favorites.

What's the best camera for travel? Good travel cameras should be small, versatile, and offer good image quality. In this buying guide we've rounded-up several great cameras for travel and recommended the best.

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USBCAMD2 is a kernel-mode minidriver library that simplifies driver development for USB-based streaming cameras. The USBCAMD2 minidriver library interfaces with the Stream class (stream.sys) and USB bus drivers so that you can focus on implementing support for the camera's properties and image processing.

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Extracting video frames from the stream and performing processing on video frames before they are returned to the calling application in the camera minidriver's CamProcessRawVideoFrameEx callback function.

The original USBCAMD minidriver library is supported on Windows 98 as usbcamd.sys, but is not supported on Windows 2000. USBCAMD2 is supported on Windows 2000 and later and on Windows Millennium Edition and later as both usbcamd.sysand usbcamd2.sys. Neither the original USBCAMD minidriver library nor USBCAMD2 are supported on 64-bit platforms.

For Windows 2000 and later and Windows Millennium Edition and later operating systems, camera vendors should use the USBCAMD2 minidriver library instead of the original library to develop camera minidrivers.

You can use the usbintel example camera minidriver as a starting point. This sample is available in the Driver Development Kit (DDK) and Windows Driver Kit (WDK) for Windows XP through Windows 7 (Build 7600). The WDK installs this sample to src\wdm\videocap\usbintel (if it was selected as an option to install).

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