![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This is because ONLY ONE application can control your camera at a time. you can NOW open ANY application of your choice and that application should be able to access the camera. This means the Mac wont auto-launch anything when your camera is connected. Pick the selection menu and select "No application" (just as I have). In the lower left corner of Image Capture (I've circled the area - and you will ONLY see this if a camera is connected and powered on) you'll see the settings that control what application the Mac will automatically launch when the camera is connected.īTW, notice the really tiny triangle in the extreme lower left corner? If you do NOT see the camera model and the dialog that reads "Connecting this camera opens:" then click that really tiny triangle (it hides or reveals the panel). Open an Apple utility called "Image Capture" (it's part of the operating system and you'l'l find it in your Applications folder). Make sure your camera is connected to the Mac & powered up. and the rest will think there is no camera available.) you can use "EOS Utility" (you don't have to use Canon's software - los of applications know how to import photos from the camera).īut you DO want to make sure that no other software is running on your Mac that is trying to grab control of your camera because only one application can control the camera at a time (the first one to get the camera wins. #2 To import photos using Canon's sofware. #1 DPP lets you view & adjust your photos. What is the next step beyond what you suggested? Thanks! The camera folder doesn't appear anywhere on the sidebar of DPP as I imagined it would allowing me to view the files. Having the same issue and installed Canon DPP per your suggestion but when connecting my camera to the macbook, all that opens is Photos with jpeg options. ![]()
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