Posts Tagged ‘iphoto

You have been publishing photos and video to your MobileMe gallery only with either iPhoto or Aperture, or uploading photos or videos directly from your computer. Now you want to publish photos and videos with both iPhoto and Aperture, but you don’t see a setting that will allow you to specify syncing with iPhoto or Aperture.

When you attempt to import your iPhoto 7.1.5 or later iPhoto library into Aperture 3 you may receive the following alert:  

When you attempt to import your iPhoto 7.1.5 or later iPhoto library into Aperture 3 you may receive the following alert:  

If you change the Advanced Importing preferences in iPhoto so that the checkbox labeled “Copy items to the iPhoto Library” is deselected, movies you import into iPhoto after that change will not appear in iMovie. Note: This issue only occurs with referenced movies that are imported to iPhoto while using iMovie ‘09 (version 8.0.5). Referenced movies which have been imported into iPhoto and accessed in iMovie prior to  iMovie ‘09 (version 8.0.5), will still appear in iMovie ‘09 (version 8.0.5)   

If you change the Advanced Importing preferences in iPhoto so that the checkbox labeled “Copy items to the iPhoto Library” is deselected, movies you import into iPhoto after that change will not appear in iMovie. Note: This issue only occurs with referenced movies that are imported to iPhoto while using iMovie ‘09 (version 8.0.5)

Why does iPhoto report a library of 7GB when the Finder says 21GB? There’s more to the iPhoto Library package than meets the eye.

Why does iPhoto report a library of 7GB when the Finder says 21GB?

Filed under: Tips and tricks , Mac 101 Courtesy molenlavapit.com If you’re the proud owner of a multi-camera/single Mac household then you’ve probably run into the problem of what happens when you plug in a camera not necessarily being what you intended. For instance, my wife used to have an issue where iPhoto would always launch when she plugged in her iPhone. This was because her Canon camera launched iPhoto whenever it was plugged in via USB. Creig Sherburne has discovered that in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard , however, camera/application management woes are tackled via an Apple utility that comes with the system.

If you have upgraded to Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard and you use iPhoto ‘08,* playing videos from within iPhoto by double-clicking them may not cause them to play. You will need to install QuickTime 7 (an optional install from the Snow Leopard Install Disc) in order to continue viewing videos in your iPhoto library. *Note: Watching videos in iPhoto ‘09 (version 8.0.4 or later) can be done without any additional installs of QuickTime.


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