Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-13 Thread Ronda Brown
That is good to hear Hugh. I was very sure that deleting the iPod Photo Cache 
folder would solve your problem. 
Deleting the cache folder forces iTunes to re-optimize all the photos and a new 
iPod Photo Cache is created when you Sync.

Thanks for getting back to the list and letting us know your result.

Cheers,
Ronni
Sent from Ronni's iPad4

On 13/08/2013, at 12:41 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

 Ronni, sorry was flat out over the weekend and didnt get a chance to try it, 
 but as it turns out deleting the ipad photo cache forced a full sync of 
 photos to my ipad and now all is good. Thanks for your help
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 08/08/2013, at 6:57 PM, Ronda Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Yes Hugh, deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder is well worth doing.
 It will also free up space on your Hard Drive.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 08/08/2013, at 5:05 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Ronni, its a A1430, which is a 3rd Generation, so i guess its not the 
 retina display, I will try your suggestions tomorrow and see if that helps.
 
 Best Regards Hugh
 
 Subject: Re: iPad and iPhoto
 From: ro...@mac.com
 Date: Thu, 8 Aug 2013 11:39:07 +0800
 To: wamug@wamug.org.au
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like 
 mine?
 As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.
 
 But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
 photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 
 
 A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.
 But if you have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo 
 Cache which is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to 
 an iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 
 
 Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the 
 original images from your Library
 
 With iPhoto'11:
 1. Quit iPhoto 
 2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 
 3. Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
 select Show Package Contents
 4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
 5. Try syncing photos again. 
 
 All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
 automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 
 
 If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:
 1. In iTunes, select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF 
 Photo syncing.
 2. Sync your device. 
 Important: This will remove all synced photos from your iPad
 3. Disconnect your iPad
 4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)
 5. Connect your iPad to iTunes.
 6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON Photo syncing.
 7. Sync your device.
 
 If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
 option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping 
 that my little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
 rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling 
 around the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to 
 then import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera 
 Connection Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad 
 Photos at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will 
 appear as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party 
 applications. When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they 
 will maintain their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots 
 that you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a 
 terrific solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post 
 back and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to 
 connect to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-12 Thread hugh griffiths
Ronni, sorry was flat out over the weekend and didnt get a chance to try it, 
but as it turns out deleting the ipad photo cache forced a full sync of photos 
to my ipad and now all is good. Thanks for your help

Best Regards
Hugh Griffiths

mobile +61 407 477 311

On 08/08/2013, at 6:57 PM, Ronda Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:

 Yes Hugh, deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder is well worth doing.
 It will also free up space on your Hard Drive.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 08/08/2013, at 5:05 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Ronni, its a A1430, which is a 3rd Generation, so i guess its not the 
 retina display, I will try your suggestions tomorrow and see if that helps.
 
 Best Regards Hugh
 
 Subject: Re: iPad and iPhoto
 From: ro...@mac.com
 Date: Thu, 8 Aug 2013 11:39:07 +0800
 To: wamug@wamug.org.au
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like 
 mine?
 As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.
 
 But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
 photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 
 
 A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.
 But if you have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo 
 Cache which is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to 
 an iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 
 
 Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the 
 original images from your Library
 
 With iPhoto'11:
 1. Quit iPhoto 
 2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 
 3. Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
 select Show Package Contents
 4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
 5. Try syncing photos again. 
 
 All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
 automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 
 
 If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:
 1. In iTunes, select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF 
 Photo syncing.
 2. Sync your device. 
 Important: This will remove all synced photos from your iPad
 3. Disconnect your iPad
 4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)
 5. Connect your iPad to iTunes.
 6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON Photo syncing.
 7. Sync your device.
 
 If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
 option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that 
 my little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
 rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
 the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then 
 import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection 
 Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos 
 at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear 
 as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. 
 When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain 
 their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that 
 you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific 
 solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post 
 back and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect 
 to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) 
 Retina Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th 
 Generation 32GB/64GB 
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
 
 With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, 
 follow these steps:
 
 1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB 
 cable between the camera and the USB adapter.
 
 2. Unlock the iPad

RE: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-08 Thread hugh griffiths
Hi Ronni, its a A1430, which is a 3rd Generation, so i guess its not the retina 
display, I will try your suggestions tomorrow and see if that helps.

Best Regards Hugh

Subject: Re: iPad and iPhoto
From: ro...@mac.com
Date: Thu, 8 Aug 2013 11:39:07 +0800
To: wamug@wamug.org.au

Hi Hugh,
What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like 
mine?As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.
But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 
A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.But if you 
have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo Cache which 
is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to an iPod, iPhone, 
and iPad. 
Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the original 
images from your Library
With iPhoto'11:1. Quit iPhoto 2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 3. 
Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, select 
Show Package Contents4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this 
folder.5. Try syncing photos again. 
All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 
If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:1. In iTunes, 
select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF Photo syncing.2. 
Sync your device. Important: This will remove all synced photos from your 
iPad3. Disconnect your iPad4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)5. Connect 
your iPad to iTunes.6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON 
Photo syncing.7. Sync your device.
If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.
Cheers,RonniSent from Ronni's iPad4
On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that my 
little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad

Best RegardsHugh Griffiths
mobile +61 407 477 311
On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:

Hi Hugh,
Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then import 
the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection Kit. This 
way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos at full 
resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. You 
can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear as 
regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. When 
you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain their full 
raw integrity. If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached 
as a converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.

Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them off 
your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that you 
want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific solution 
called Raw+JPEG.
If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post back 
and I can give you the information.
When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect to 
the Lightning connection on the iPad.
Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   
$35http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) Retina 
Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th Generation 
32GB/64GB 
http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, follow 
these steps:
1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB cable 
between the camera and the USB adapter.
2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a new 
Camera button appears on the bar at the top of the screen. Thumbnails of the 
available photos and video clips appear below.
3. Now, do one of the following:
*To copy all of the items to the iPad, tap the Import All button.
*To be more selective, tap the items you wish to import; a blue checkmark 
symbol indicates the item is queued for import. Once you’ve made your 
selections, tap the Import button; the app gives you one last chance to import 
all items, or you can import just the selected ones.
4. After the transfer is complete, you’re asked if you want to delete

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-08 Thread Ronda Brown
Yes Hugh, deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder is well worth doing.
It will also free up space on your Hard Drive.

Cheers,
Ronni

Sent from Ronni's iPad4

On 08/08/2013, at 5:05 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

 Hi Ronni, its a A1430, which is a 3rd Generation, so i guess its not the 
 retina display, I will try your suggestions tomorrow and see if that helps.
 
 Best Regards Hugh
 
 Subject: Re: iPad and iPhoto
 From: ro...@mac.com
 Date: Thu, 8 Aug 2013 11:39:07 +0800
 To: wamug@wamug.org.au
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like mine?
 As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.
 
 But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
 photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 
 
 A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.
 But if you have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo 
 Cache which is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to an 
 iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 
 
 Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the 
 original images from your Library
 
 With iPhoto'11:
 1. Quit iPhoto 
 2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 
 3. Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
 select Show Package Contents
 4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
 5. Try syncing photos again. 
 
 All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
 automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 
 
 If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:
 1. In iTunes, select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF 
 Photo syncing.
 2. Sync your device. 
 Important: This will remove all synced photos from your iPad
 3. Disconnect your iPad
 4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)
 5. Connect your iPad to iTunes.
 6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON Photo syncing.
 7. Sync your device.
 
 If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
 option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that 
 my little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
 rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
 the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then 
 import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection 
 Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos 
 at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear 
 as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. 
 When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain 
 their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that 
 you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific 
 solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post back 
 and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect 
 to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) 
 Retina Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th 
 Generation 32GB/64GB 
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
 
 With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, 
 follow these steps:
 
 1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB 
 cable between the camera and the USB adapter.
 
 2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
 iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a 
 new Camera button appears on the bar at the top of the screen. Thumbnails of 
 the available photos and video clips appear below.
 
 3. Now, do one of the following:
 
 *To copy all of the items to the iPad

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-08 Thread Susan Hastings
My 3rd generation iPad has a retina display, that's when they first came in.

Sent from my iPad

On 08/08/2013, at 5:05 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

 Hi Ronni, its a A1430, which is a 3rd Generation, so i guess its not the 
 retina display, I will try your suggestions tomorrow and see if that helps.
 
 Best Regards Hugh
 
 Subject: Re: iPad and iPhoto
 From: ro...@mac.com
 Date: Thu, 8 Aug 2013 11:39:07 +0800
 To: wamug@wamug.org.au
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like mine?
 As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.
 
 But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
 photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 
 
 A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.
 But if you have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo 
 Cache which is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to an 
 iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 
 
 Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the 
 original images from your Library
 
 With iPhoto'11:
 1. Quit iPhoto 
 2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 
 3. Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
 select Show Package Contents
 4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
 5. Try syncing photos again. 
 
 All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
 automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 
 
 If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:
 1. In iTunes, select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF 
 Photo syncing.
 2. Sync your device. 
 Important: This will remove all synced photos from your iPad
 3. Disconnect your iPad
 4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)
 5. Connect your iPad to iTunes.
 6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON Photo syncing.
 7. Sync your device.
 
 If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
 option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that 
 my little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
 rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
 the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then 
 import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection 
 Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos 
 at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear 
 as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. 
 When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain 
 their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that 
 you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific 
 solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post back 
 and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect 
 to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) 
 Retina Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th 
 Generation 32GB/64GB 
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
 
 With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, 
 follow these steps:
 
 1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB 
 cable between the camera and the USB adapter.
 
 2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
 iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a 
 new Camera button appears on the bar at the top of the screen. Thumbnails of 
 the available photos and video clips appear below.
 
 3. Now, do one of the following:
 
 *To copy all of the items to the iPad, tap the Import All button.
 
 *To be more selective, tap

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-08 Thread Ronda Brown
Yes Susan, and both the iPad 3rd Generation and iPad 4th Generation have 
2048x1536 (264 ppi) resolution.

Sent from Ronni's iPad4

On 08/08/2013, at 9:58 PM, Susan Hastings susanhasti...@mac.com wrote:

 My 3rd generation iPad has a retina display, that's when they first came in.
 
 Sent from my iPad
 
 On 08/08/2013, at 5:05 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Ronni, its a A1430, which is a 3rd Generation, so i guess its not the 
 retina display, I will try your suggestions tomorrow and see if that helps.
 
 Best Regards Hugh
 
 Subject: Re: iPad and iPhoto
 From: ro...@mac.com
 Date: Thu, 8 Aug 2013 11:39:07 +0800
 To: wamug@wamug.org.au
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like 
 mine?
 As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.
 
 But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
 photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 
 
 A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.
 But if you have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo 
 Cache which is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to 
 an iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 
 
 Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the 
 original images from your Library
 
 With iPhoto'11:
 1. Quit iPhoto 
 2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 
 3. Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
 select Show Package Contents
 4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
 5. Try syncing photos again. 
 
 All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
 automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 
 
 If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:
 1. In iTunes, select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF 
 Photo syncing.
 2. Sync your device. 
 Important: This will remove all synced photos from your iPad
 3. Disconnect your iPad
 4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)
 5. Connect your iPad to iTunes.
 6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON Photo syncing.
 7. Sync your device.
 
 If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
 option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that 
 my little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
 rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
 the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then 
 import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection 
 Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos 
 at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear 
 as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. 
 When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain 
 their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that 
 you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific 
 solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post 
 back and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect 
 to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) 
 Retina Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th 
 Generation 32GB/64GB 
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
 
 With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, 
 follow these steps:
 
 1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB 
 cable between the camera and the USB adapter.
 
 2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
 iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a 
 new Camera button appears on the bar at the top

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-07 Thread Ronda Brown
Hi Hugh,

What model iPad do you have, I thought you had a new Retina Display like mine?
As I mentioned before the resolution is 2048-by-1536 pixels.

But what concerns me is that iTunes should be automatically optimizing the 
photos to a compatible size when you sync to the iPad. 

A sync won't happen if you are running out of space on your iPad.
But if you have plenty of space, I would suggest you delete the iPod Photo 
Cache which is created in the iPhoto database when transferring photos to an 
iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 

Important: Deleting the iPod Photo Cache folder will NOT remove the original 
images from your Library

With iPhoto'11:
1. Quit iPhoto 
2. In Finder go to Pictures  iPhoto Library. 
3. Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
select Show Package Contents
4. Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
5. Try syncing photos again. 

All selected photos will need to be re-optimized again, which will 
automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your iPhoto library, 

If you still find you are unable to sync the landscape photos:
1. In iTunes, select your iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn OFF Photo 
syncing.
2. Sync your device. 
Important: This will remove all synced photos from your iPad
3. Disconnect your iPad
4. Remove your iPod photo cache (as above)
5. Connect your iPad to iTunes.
6. Select the iPad, then select the Photos pane and turn ON Photo syncing.
7. Sync your device.

If you are still unable to sync the landscape photos, well I guess the only 
option you have then is to rescale to 2048-by-1536.

Cheers,
Ronni
Sent from Ronni's iPad4

On 07/08/2013, at 1:49 PM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

 Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that 
 my little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
 rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
 the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then 
 import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection 
 Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos 
 at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear 
 as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. 
 When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain 
 their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that 
 you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific 
 solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post 
 back and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect 
 to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) 
 Retina Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th 
 Generation 32GB/64GB 
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
 
 With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, 
 follow these steps:
 
 1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB 
 cable between the camera and the USB adapter.
 
 2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
 iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a 
 new Camera button appears on the bar at the top of the screen. Thumbnails of 
 the available photos and video clips appear below.
 
 3. Now, do one of the following:
 
 *To copy all of the items to the iPad, tap the Import All button.
 
 *To be more selective, tap the items you wish to import; a blue checkmark 
 symbol indicates the item is queued for import. Once you’ve made your 
 selections, tap the Import button; the app gives you one last chance to 
 import all items, or you can import just the selected ones.
 
 4. After the transfer is complete, you’re asked if you want to delete the 
 imported items from the camera or keep them. Tap the Keep button—it’s 
 usually better to format memory cards within the camera instead.
 
 The photos and videos are 

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-06 Thread Ronni Brown
Hi Hugh,

During a sync, iTunes “optimizes” photos before copying them to the iPad, which 
means they’re resized and converted so the original high-resolution versions 
don’t slow performance in the Photos app. 

Photos are resized to no more than 1536 pixels on the shortest side and no more 
than 2304 pixels on the longest side (so, a horizontal picture could be 
something like 2048 pixels wide by 1536 pixels tall, while a vertical shot 
would be 1536 pixels wide and 2048 pixels tall). 
Images are also converted to JPEG files, which compresses the image data 
without noticeable degradation of detail.

Cheers,
Ronni

On 07/08/2013, at 8:08 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

 Hi, i have an imac 10.6.8 with iphoto 11 (9.2.3) and itunes 11.04. When i 
 download my photos from my sony  camera to iphoto and sync my ipad, the only 
 photos that sync with the ipad are ones that are in portrait mode, ie 
 2248x4000 pixels, any photo in landscape ie 4000x2248 pixes wont sync. I'm 
 very confused as to what I might have done wrong, I dont want to rotate every 
 photo. Does anyone have any tips on what I might be able to do?
 
 Hugh

-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Settings  Unsubscribe - http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-06 Thread hugh griffiths
Thanks Ronni, so does that mean I should turn off optimisation some how?

Best Regards
Hugh Griffiths

mobile +61 407 477 311

On 07/08/2013, at 9:32 AM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:

 Hi Hugh,
 
 During a sync, iTunes “optimizes” photos before copying them to the iPad, 
 which means they’re resized and converted so the original high-resolution 
 versions don’t slow performance in the Photos app. 
 
 Photos are resized to no more than 1536 pixels on the shortest side and no 
 more than 2304 pixels on the longest side (so, a horizontal picture could be 
 something like 2048 pixels wide by 1536 pixels tall, while a vertical shot 
 would be 1536 pixels wide and 2048 pixels tall). 
 Images are also converted to JPEG files, which compresses the image data 
 without noticeable degradation of detail.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 8:08 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi, i have an imac 10.6.8 with iphoto 11 (9.2.3) and itunes 11.04. When i 
 download my photos from my sony  camera to iphoto and sync my ipad, the only 
 photos that sync with the ipad are ones that are in portrait mode, ie 
 2248x4000 pixels, any photo in landscape ie 4000x2248 pixes wont sync. I'm 
 very confused as to what I might have done wrong, I dont want to rotate 
 every photo. Does anyone have any tips on what I might be able to do?
 
 Hugh
 
 -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
 Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
 Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
 Settings  Unsubscribe - 
 http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug
-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Settings  Unsubscribe - http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Settings  Unsubscribe - http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-06 Thread Ronda Brown
Hi Hugh,

No, iTunes automatically optimizes the photos for the best viewing on the iPad.
As far as I know there is no way to override this feature.

I'll search through all my documents when I can find time to see if you have 
any options.
If I find any information I'll get back to you.

Cheers,
Ronni
Sent from Ronni's iPad4

On 07/08/2013, at 10:07 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:

 Thanks Ronni, so does that mean I should turn off optimisation some how?
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 9:32 AM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 During a sync, iTunes “optimizes” photos before copying them to the iPad, 
 which means they’re resized and converted so the original high-resolution 
 versions don’t slow performance in the Photos app. 
 
 Photos are resized to no more than 1536 pixels on the shortest side and no 
 more than 2304 pixels on the longest side (so, a horizontal picture could be 
 something like 2048 pixels wide by 1536 pixels tall, while a vertical shot 
 would be 1536 pixels wide and 2048 pixels tall). 
 Images are also converted to JPEG files, which compresses the image data 
 without noticeable degradation of detail.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 8:08 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi, i have an imac 10.6.8 with iphoto 11 (9.2.3) and itunes 11.04. When i 
 download my photos from my sony  camera to iphoto and sync my ipad, the 
 only photos that sync with the ipad are ones that are in portrait mode, 
 ie 2248x4000 pixels, any photo in landscape ie 4000x2248 pixes wont sync. 
 I'm very confused as to what I might have done wrong, I dont want to rotate 
 every photo. Does anyone have any tips on what I might be able to do?
 
 Hugh
-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Settings  Unsubscribe - http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-06 Thread hugh griffiths
Ok thanks, as its really irritating to not be able to view 80% of my photos on 
my ipad

Best Regards
Hugh Griffiths

mobile +61 407 477 311

On 07/08/2013, at 10:17 AM, Ronda Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:

 Hi Hugh,
 
 No, iTunes automatically optimizes the photos for the best viewing on the 
 iPad.
 As far as I know there is no way to override this feature.
 
 I'll search through all my documents when I can find time to see if you have 
 any options.
 If I find any information I'll get back to you.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 10:07 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, so does that mean I should turn off optimisation some how?
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 9:32 AM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 During a sync, iTunes “optimizes” photos before copying them to the iPad, 
 which means they’re resized and converted so the original high-resolution 
 versions don’t slow performance in the Photos app. 
 
 Photos are resized to no more than 1536 pixels on the shortest side and no 
 more than 2304 pixels on the longest side (so, a horizontal picture could 
 be something like 2048 pixels wide by 1536 pixels tall, while a vertical 
 shot would be 1536 pixels wide and 2048 pixels tall). 
 Images are also converted to JPEG files, which compresses the image data 
 without noticeable degradation of detail.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 8:08 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi, i have an imac 10.6.8 with iphoto 11 (9.2.3) and itunes 11.04. When i 
 download my photos from my sony  camera to iphoto and sync my ipad, the 
 only photos that sync with the ipad are ones that are in portrait mode, 
 ie 2248x4000 pixels, any photo in landscape ie 4000x2248 pixes wont 
 sync. I'm very confused as to what I might have done wrong, I dont want to 
 rotate every photo. Does anyone have any tips on what I might be able to 
 do?
 
 Hugh
 -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
 Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
 Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
 Settings  Unsubscribe - 
 http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug
-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Settings  Unsubscribe - http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Settings  Unsubscribe - http://lists.wamug.org.au/listinfo/wamug.org.au-wamug

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-06 Thread Ronni Brown
Hi Hugh,

Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then import 
the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection Kit. 
This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos at 
full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.

Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. You 
can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear as 
regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. When 
you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain their full 
raw integrity. 
If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a converted 
full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.

Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them off 
your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that you 
want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific solution 
called Raw+JPEG.
If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post back 
and I can give you the information.

When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect to 
the Lightning connection on the iPad.

Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit

Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) Retina 
Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th Generation 
32GB/64GB 
http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a

With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, follow 
these steps:

1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB cable 
between the camera and the USB adapter.

2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a new 
Camera button appears on the bar at the top of the screen. Thumbnails of the 
available photos and video clips appear below.

3. Now, do one of the following:

*To copy all of the items to the iPad, tap the Import All button.

*To be more selective, tap the items you wish to import; a blue checkmark 
symbol indicates the item is queued for import. Once you’ve made your 
selections, tap the Import button; the app gives you one last chance to import 
all items, or you can import just the selected ones.

4. After the transfer is complete, you’re asked if you want to delete the 
imported items from the camera or keep them. Tap the Keep button—it’s usually 
better to format memory cards within the camera instead.

The photos and videos are found in two new albums: 
All Imported and Last Import (which shows just the most recent imported images).
-
You might be interested in reading this: How to achieve Retina display-worthy 
photos for the new iPad
http://www.macworld.com/article/1167865/how_to_achieve_retina_display_worthy_photos_for_the_new_ipad.html

Cheers,
Ronni

17 MacBook Pro 2.3GHz Quad-Core i7 “Thunderbolt
2.3GHz / 8GB / 750GB @ 7200rpm HD

OS X 10.8.4 Mountain Lion
Windows 7 Ultimate (under sufferance)

On 07/08/2013, at 10:17 AM, Ronda Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:

 Hi Hugh,
 
 No, iTunes automatically optimizes the photos for the best viewing on the 
 iPad.
 As far as I know there is no way to override this feature.
 
 I'll search through all my documents when I can find time to see if you have 
 any options.
 If I find any information I'll get back to you.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 10:07 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, so does that mean I should turn off optimisation some how?
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 9:32 AM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 During a sync, iTunes “optimizes” photos before copying them to the iPad, 
 which means they’re resized and converted so the original high-resolution 
 versions don’t slow performance in the Photos app. 
 
 Photos are resized to no more than 1536 pixels on the shortest side and no 
 more than 2304 pixels on the longest side (so, a horizontal picture could 
 be something like 2048 pixels wide by 1536 pixels tall, while a vertical 
 shot would be 1536 pixels wide and 2048 pixels tall). 
 Images are also converted to JPEG files, which compresses the image data 
 without noticeable degradation of detail.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 8:08 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi, i have an imac 10.6.8 with iphoto 11 (9.2.3) and itunes 11.04. When i 
 download my photos from my sony  camera to iphoto and sync my ipad, the 
 only photos that sync with the ipad are ones that are in portrait mode, 
 ie 2248x4000 pixels, any 

Re: iPad and iPhoto

2013-08-06 Thread hugh griffiths
Thanks Ronni, I have a camera kit and use it for my DLSR, but as hoping that my 
little camera would go in via the mac. I have discovered that 
rescaling/cropping to 1680x1050 allows them to be seen on the ipad

Best Regards
Hugh Griffiths

mobile +61 407 477 311

On 07/08/2013, at 1:39 PM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:

 Hi Hugh,
 
 Looking through my Documents; I then remembered when I was travelling around 
 the country taking lots of photos on my Sony Camera, how I used to then 
 import the photos from my Sony onto my iPad using Apple Camera Connection 
 Kit. 
 This way you don't loose any quality as the photos import to the iPad Photos 
 at full resolution. Viewing on the iPad is beautiful.
 
 Amazingly enough, the iPad supports the same raw files that your Mac does. 
 You can upload these files from your camera to the iPad and they will appear 
 as regular photos in the Photos app, Keynote, and third-party applications. 
 When you transfer the images off the iPad to your Mac, they will maintain 
 their full raw integrity. 
 If you email them from the iPad, however, they will be attached as a 
 converted full-sized JPEG instead of a raw file.
 
 Because raw files take up more space than JPEGs, you will want to move them 
 off your iPad as soon as possible. But what about those great raw shots that 
 you want to keep on the iPad for sharing with others? There’s a terrific 
 solution called Raw+JPEG.
 If you require more details about a Raw+JPEG workflow for the iPad, post back 
 and I can give you the information.
 
 When I upgraded my iPad to the iPad Retina Display I had to purchase a 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor so I can use my Camera Connection Kit to connect 
 to the Lightning connection on the iPad.
 
 Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit   $35
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MC531ZM/A/apple-ipad-camera-connection-kit
 
 Lightning to 30-pin Adaptor   $35   for iPhone 5, iPad (4th generation) 
 Retina Display, iPad mini, iPod nano 7th Generation  iPod Touch 5th 
 Generation 32GB/64GB 
 http://store.apple.com/au/product/MD823ZM/A/lightning-to-30-pin-adapter?fnode=3a
 
 With a camera full of images and the iPad Camera Connection Kit in hand, 
 follow these steps:
 
 1. Insert the camera’s SD card into the SD card adapter, or connect a USB 
 cable between the camera and the USB adapter.
 
 2. Unlock the iPad if it’s currently asleep, and plug the adapter into the 
 iPad’s dock connector. After a few seconds, the Photos app launches, and a 
 new Camera button appears on the bar at the top of the screen. Thumbnails of 
 the available photos and video clips appear below.
 
 3. Now, do one of the following:
 
 *To copy all of the items to the iPad, tap the Import All button.
 
 *To be more selective, tap the items you wish to import; a blue checkmark 
 symbol indicates the item is queued for import. Once you’ve made your 
 selections, tap the Import button; the app gives you one last chance to 
 import all items, or you can import just the selected ones.
 
 4. After the transfer is complete, you’re asked if you want to delete the 
 imported items from the camera or keep them. Tap the Keep button—it’s usually 
 better to format memory cards within the camera instead.
 
 The photos and videos are found in two new albums: 
 All Imported and Last Import (which shows just the most recent imported 
 images).
 -
 You might be interested in reading this: How to achieve Retina 
 display-worthy photos for the new iPad
 http://www.macworld.com/article/1167865/how_to_achieve_retina_display_worthy_photos_for_the_new_ipad.html
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 17 MacBook Pro 2.3GHz Quad-Core i7 “Thunderbolt
 2.3GHz / 8GB / 750GB @ 7200rpm HD
 
 OS X 10.8.4 Mountain Lion
 Windows 7 Ultimate (under sufferance)
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 10:17 AM, Ronda Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 No, iTunes automatically optimizes the photos for the best viewing on the 
 iPad.
 As far as I know there is no way to override this feature.
 
 I'll search through all my documents when I can find time to see if you have 
 any options.
 If I find any information I'll get back to you.
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 Sent from Ronni's iPad4
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 10:07 AM, hugh griffiths hgr...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 Thanks Ronni, so does that mean I should turn off optimisation some how?
 
 Best Regards
 Hugh Griffiths
 
 mobile +61 407 477 311
 
 On 07/08/2013, at 9:32 AM, Ronni Brown ro...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hi Hugh,
 
 During a sync, iTunes “optimizes” photos before copying them to the iPad, 
 which means they’re resized and converted so the original high-resolution 
 versions don’t slow performance in the Photos app. 
 
 Photos are resized to no more than 1536 pixels on the shortest side and no 
 more than 2304 pixels on the longest side (so, a horizontal picture could 
 be something like 2048 pixels wide by 1536 pixels tall, while a vertical 
 shot would be 1536 pixels wide and 2048 pixels tall). 
 Images are also converted to JPEG files, which 

Re: iPad and iPhoto syncing

2011-08-27 Thread Ronda Brown
Hi Tim,

Try deleting the iPod Photo Cache, which is created in the iPhoto database when 
transferring photos to an iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 

With iPhoto 09, quit iPhoto if launched and using the Finder go to Pictures  
iPhoto Library. 

Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, select 
Show Package Contents. 

Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.

Try syncing photos again. All selected photos will need to be re-optimized 
again, which will automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your 
iPhoto library, 

Cheers,
Ronni

Sent from Ronni's iPad

On 27/08/2011, at 9:35 PM, Tim Law t...@peoplehelp.com.au wrote:

 
 Hello 
 
 I have an iPad 1 running 4.3.5 and have been successfully syncing it with 
 iTunes 10.4.1 and iPhoto 8.1.2
 The iTunes is running on a Mac Mini running 10.7.1
 
 I also sync this same iTunes with my iPhone4 with no problems and up until a 
 week ago had no problems with the iPad photo syncing either. I believe the 
 same set of photos are set to sync with the iPhone4
 
 The only problem I am having is the iPhoto syncing. When the iPad is on the 
 last stages of syncing, after going through all the app updates, music etc., 
 it moves onto Photos. I get an error message The required file cannot be 
 found and the sync stops. 
 
 If I turn OFF sync photos, the sync completes normally and there is no 
 problem.
 
 I have rebuild the iPhoto database. 
 I have restored the iPad software and reloaded from the latest backup. 
 
 I have tried to identify which particular photo might be the problem by using 
 Console, but it does not seem to show that depth of detail. 
 
 Is there a way of identifying which photo is the problem so I can deal with 
 this problem?
 
 Thanks
 
 Tim
 
 
 -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
 Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
 Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
 Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au
 



-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au



Re: iPad and iPhoto syncing

2011-08-27 Thread Tim Law
Thanks Ronni,

I am using iPhoto 8, but nevertheless, this solution has worked. 

Late last night when I was checking the Apple Discussion, I read that the iPad 
cache was in iPhoto Application package - which it wasn't. 

What I've read more clearly this morning, or maybe it was incorrect in the 
Apple Support Forums, from your message was to open the iPhoto Library package, 
and there it was. So,  thanks for your help, the iPad is happily syncing away 
now.

Tim



On 28/08/2011, at 7:04 AM, Ronda Brown wrote:

 Hi Tim,
 
 Try deleting the iPod Photo Cache, which is created in the iPhoto database 
 when transferring photos to an iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 
 
 With iPhoto 09, quit iPhoto if launched and using the Finder go to Pictures  
 iPhoto Library. 
 
 Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, 
 select Show Package Contents. 
 
 Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.
 
 Try syncing photos again. All selected photos will need to be re-optimized 
 again, which will automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your 
 iPhoto library, 
 
 Cheers,
 Ronni
 
 Sent from Ronni's iPad
 
 On 27/08/2011, at 9:35 PM, Tim Law t...@peoplehelp.com.au wrote:
 
 
 Hello 
 
 I have an iPad 1 running 4.3.5 and have been successfully syncing it with 
 iTunes 10.4.1 and iPhoto 8.1.2
 The iTunes is running on a Mac Mini running 10.7.1
 
 I also sync this same iTunes with my iPhone4 with no problems and up until a 
 week ago had no problems with the iPad photo syncing either. I believe the 
 same set of photos are set to sync with the iPhone4
 
 The only problem I am having is the iPhoto syncing. When the iPad is on the 
 last stages of syncing, after going through all the app updates, music etc., 
 it moves onto Photos. I get an error message The required file cannot be 
 found and the sync stops. 
 
 If I turn OFF sync photos, the sync completes normally and there is no 
 problem.
 
 I have rebuild the iPhoto database. 
 I have restored the iPad software and reloaded from the latest backup. 
 
 I have tried to identify which particular photo might be the problem by 
 using Console, but it does not seem to show that depth of detail. 
 
 Is there a way of identifying which photo is the problem so I can deal with 
 this problem?
 
 Thanks
 
 Tim
 
 
 -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
 Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
 Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
 Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au
 
 
 
 
 -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
 Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
 Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
 Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au




-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au



Re: iPad and iPhoto syncing

2011-08-27 Thread Alan Smith
Thanks Tim and Ronni

Fantastic clairvoyance!Just had a similar problem this morning after iTunes 
10.4.1 update and syncing of iPad2 with new photo events.

Found a rather cryptic Apple Communities thread that advised (without step by 
instructions) to delete the iPod cache folder AND to Right click on itunes 
program and set to run always as an administrator.   Other people found this 
last item to be essential.   I didn't do it as (a) it worked without it and (b) 
I couldn't find where to do it anyway.

Cheers, Alan 


On 28/08/2011, at 7:04 AM, Ronda Brown wrote:

Hi Tim,

Try deleting the iPod Photo Cache, which is created in the iPhoto database when 
transferring photos to an iPod, iPhone, and iPad. 

With iPhoto 09, quit iPhoto if launched and using the Finder go to Pictures  
iPhoto Library. 

Control-click on the iPhoto Library and at the menu window that appears, select 
Show Package Contents. 

Locate the iPod Photo Cache folder and delete this folder.

Try syncing photos again. All selected photos will need to be re-optimized 
again, which will automatically create a new iPod Photo Cache folder in your 
iPhoto library, 

Cheers,
Ronni

Sent from Ronni's iPad

On 27/08/2011, at 9:35 PM, Tim Law t...@peoplehelp.com.au wrote:

 
 Hello 
 
 I have an iPad 1 running 4.3.5 and have been successfully syncing it with 
 iTunes 10.4.1 and iPhoto 8.1.2
 The iTunes is running on a Mac Mini running 10.7.1
 
 I also sync this same iTunes with my iPhone4 with no problems and up until a 
 week ago had no problems with the iPad photo syncing either. I believe the 
 same set of photos are set to sync with the iPhone4
 
 The only problem I am having is the iPhoto syncing. When the iPad is on the 
 last stages of syncing, after going through all the app updates, music etc., 
 it moves onto Photos. I get an error message The required file cannot be 
 found and the sync stops. 
 
 If I turn OFF sync photos, the sync completes normally and there is no 
 problem.
 
 I have rebuild the iPhoto database. 
 I have restored the iPad software and reloaded from the latest backup. 
 
 I have tried to identify which particular photo might be the problem by using 
 Console, but it does not seem to show that depth of detail. 
 
 Is there a way of identifying which photo is the problem so I can deal with 
 this problem?
 
 Thanks
 
 Tim
 
 
 -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
 Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
 Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
 Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au
 



-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au




-- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List --
Archives - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml
Guidelines - http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml
Unsubscribe - mailto:wamug-unsubscr...@wamug.org.au