Camera Digital Kodak Easyshare Touch

You can use one of two methods to upload your favorite images to Facebook. When you purchase a Kodak EasyShare camera, the device comes with the Kodak EasyShare software. In addition to uploading your digital photos from the camera and managing them on your PC, you can post them to your Facebook page directly from the software. Alternatively, you can use the "Share" button on the EasyShare camera to upload images to Facebook. Before using this method, however, you must install the Share Button App software on your PC. Open your photo album in Kodak EasyShare and then select the images you want to upload to Facebook. Click the “Facebook” button on the main toolbar. Enter the email address and password you use for Facebook and click the “Log In” button. Select your app settings in the Authorization dialog box. By default, all of your Facebook friends will be able to view photos you post with the Kodak EasyShare app. To change this setting, click the “Friends” drop-down menu and select another option such as “Only Me,” “Everyone” or “Custom.”
Click the “Log in to Facebook” button after choosing your preferred app setting. Enter a new folder name or choose an existing photo album in the Upload to Facebook dialog box. Click the “Upload” button to upload the images to Facebook. Connect the Kodak EasyShare camera to your computer with the USB cable and then turn on the camera. You will be asked to install Share Button App. Click the “Install Now” button and follow the on-screen prompts to complete the installation. T-Shirt Sprüche ArztClick the Facebook “Add Account” link on the main menu and then click the “Authorize” button. Second Hand Tyres CanterburyEnter the email address and password you use to access your Facebook account and click “Connect.” Chow Chow Puppies Jackson Ms
Power down the Kodak EasyShare camera and disconnect it from the computer. After you disconnect the device, turn it on and press the "Review" mode button. Select the photos you want to upload to Facebook. Press the “Share” button on the back of the camera and choose “Facebook” from the list of options. Connect the camera to your computer to transfer the pictures to your Facebook account automatically. When the upload is complete, the “Successfully uploaded to Facebook” message will appear in the "Sharing and Transfer Results" window. References Kodak Support: Install and Use the Share Button AppKodak Support: Use the Share Button App to Transfer and Share Pictures and Videos Photo Credits Thinkstock Images/Comstock/Getty ImagesI'm Chris Watkins, a leader of creative teams, a designer of user-centered products, and a storyteller in comics and illustration.I've developed user experiences for electronics and apps, designed characters, published comics in print and pixels, taught English, studied Japanese (and played many, many games).
:: You're viewing my Experience Design work ::See my Comics, Characters, & Illustration >> Bose User Experience Design Language The challenge: Lead a team to develop a comprehensive design language that governs and guides user experience design across the portfolio of Bose consumer electronics. The solution: A strategic high-level set of principles and tenets coupled with an actionable collection of guidelines for interaction and graphic designers. Implementation across the Bose portfolio, starting with the ecosystem of SoundTouch wireless music products. (See Bose wireless speakers, home theater systems, and headphones.) Kodak Slice Touchscreen Camera UI The challenge: Create an intuitive and engaging way for users to relive up to 5000 pictures worth of memories on the back of a touchscreen digital camera. The solution: Added granularity in the basic image review experience with a scalable thumbnail overlay and real-world modeled "flip book" navigation through pictures.
Auto and manual filtering including date-based photo stacks in a time line style view. Fast and easy sorting by person with a quick double-tap to search by face. Kodak Easyshare Touch Camera UI The challenge: Lead an interdisciplinary team of interaction designers and human factors engineers to develop a touchscreen camera UI with competition-busting performance.The solution: Completely redefined touch interactions and directed overhaul of specification documents. Gathered data from expert evaluators, consultants, and user testing to refine designs in iterative rounds with firmware developers. Final implemented touch experience was rated by users and evaluators as nearly double the performance quality of key industry competition. The challenge: Translate a newly developed visual and interaction design strategy concept into a robust user-centered UI design for use across Kodak's digital camera portfolio. The solution: A new UI implemented on over forty cameras across multiple portfolio years, on a variety of camera types (low-cost, high-feature, and "pro-sumer" models).
Visual design made consistent and subdued to bring user content to the forefront. Key features given immediate access via shortcut bars and in-line menu editing. Controls simplified and confusing hardware button repurposing eliminated. Icons revised and supported with dynamic text messaging for clarity. The challenge: Devise a touchscreen UI, following established visual design guidelines, for movie theater projectionists to use in loading, playing, and creating playlists of digital video content. The solution: An uncluttered but feature rich UI that emphasizes ease of touch control and visibility in low light conditions. The challenge: Create a comic with a compelling story that teaches Japanese as part of the reading experience.The solution: An interactive Web-based comic series with integrated translation, instruction, and review tools in every page. Click here to launch an Electric Spirit sample. (Will open in a new window.)Kodak EasyShare cameras can benefit from a firmware update.
Your digital camera isn't meant to be complicated. You point and shoot to have photos to share with your friends and family. But camera manufacturers, like Kodak, constantly update a camera's firmware to make it work better. The firmware controls the programming and code on your camera and helps your Easyshare run more smoothly. Updating it regularly keeps your camera working to the best of its ability. Download the most current firmware specific to your Easyshare model from Kodak's support site (full link in Resources). Find the specific firmware for your camera by entering the search term "Easyshare," "firmware" and the model number of your camera, which you can find written across the front of your camera. After the download completes, double-click the EXE file and choose a folder into which to extract the files. Turn your Easyshare camera off and flip open the memory card panel. Press down on the memory card to eject it. Remove the memory card, then connect the camera to a USB cable or its charging dock to charge fully.
Insert the memory card into your computer's card reader -- which is usually a slot in the front edge of a laptop or in the front panel of a desktop computer -- and click "Open folder to view files" or "Import pictures and videos" and follow the prompts to copy the photos from your memory card so you won't lose them. Click in the top right-hand corner of Windows and then click on the "Search" charm. Type "File Explorer" and then click "File Explorer" to open the program. Click on the drive associated with your memory card -- usually "E:" or "F:". If the memory card doesn't have a folder on it called "System," right-click and choose "New," "New Folder" and then type the name "System" and press "Enter." Browse to the folder where the EXE file was extracted in Step 1 and copy the PAK file to the "System" folder. Press on the memory card in the card reader to eject it. Open the memory card slot on your Easyshare camera, then insert the card according to the diagram inside the cover, usually with the label on the memory card facing the front of the camera.