One other idea, if you can get back into your photos is to rebuild the library.
Support.apple.com/kb/HT2638 Hope that helps. -- Sent from my Washer and Dryer On May 4, 2010 9:50, Wayne Bonnett <[email protected]> wrote: Also, before opening iPhoto, hold down the option key and click the iphoto icon and it will eventually ask you where to find your iphoto library. It's worth a try I suppose. ;-) -- Sent from my Washer and Dryer On May 4, 2010 9:22, David Harker <[email protected]> wrote: from my limited knowledge of iPhoto, yet numerous times i have messed up things on my macs, i can suggest that you see if you can reset iPhoto to use the external where your files are saved, as the source to draw the files from. seems its a similar problem with an incorrect path that iPhoto is using, to read the files from, which i have come across with iTunes, in the past. i keep all my music on an external, and if i launch iTunes w/o that drive attached, the app will use the default location on the main drive as its source for files, thus no files are found when i would attempt to play music. On 5/3/10, Stuart Ungar <[email protected]> wrote: I was working with iPhoto when the plug to my external HD pulled out. Well, I have over 13,000 photos and now NONE of them are showing up. I have messed with it a little and have googled the problem, but this may be a problem that I shouldn't attempt DIY. I have backed up many of the photos onto DVDs and they are SOMEWHERE in the house, but ideally, I would like to get all the photos/movies etc... back. It has been a while since I backed up (I know, I know) and hopefully I didn't lose the most recent photos. Any ideas? Any place locally that I should go to fix this (hopefully)? Thanks! Stuart _______________________________________________ MacGroup mailing list [email protected] http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup
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