Windows will not recognize Kodak camera and transfer pictures

G

Guest

I recently reinstalled windows xp professional over a copy I found to not be
genuine. Now that I have the genuine copy my computer will no longer
recognize my camera when plugged into the USB port to transfer my pictures. I
have a Kodak CX7330. I update the Kodak software and followed their trouble
shooting site to no avail. The message I get says that it cannot find my
camera to try again. Everything else that I've tried on my computer works
fine (so far) except for this. All my old pictures are still there and work
fine. Any suggestions?
 
Y

Yves Alarie

Some possible solutions

Repair for Camera (or card reader) Autoplay window (or Wizard) March
21, 2005



A. Interferences due to software on your computer



If you installed Real Player 10, this is a likely culprit preventing XP to
automatically recognize the camera or card reader and open the Autoplay
window.

You will have to uninstall Real Player and maybe do something else as
described below. After you uninstall Real Player 10, reboot your computer
and then try with your camera or card reader again.

If you do not want to uninstall RealPlayer, you can go around it and still
get Autoplay, as given below:

Open Real Player. Go to Tools then Preferences.
Click on Automated Services and then Disable Message Center and Auto
updates. Reboot your computer and then try with your camera or card reader
again.



Note. On March 21, 2005 I had to update my old Real Player 7 to 10 (now
version 10.5) to download something from the Internet. After installing I
checked with a card in my camera and then with the card reader. No problem
opening the camera or card reader as a drive and listing the options in the
opening Autoplay window. So maybe all you have to do is update to 10.5 to
solve the problem.



Also, if you are on XP SP2, there is interference from early versions of
Nero and Incd (both are used to burn to CD) installed when you purchased
your computer (even if you have never used them). Uninstall Incd and update
Nero from here:

http://ww2.nero.com/us/Support_News_Service_Pack_2_Inquiries.html

and reboot after updating







B. Several ways to download your pictures, from your camera or card reader.





Before you connect your camera to your computer, make sure you have enough
battery power or better yet use your AC connector if your camera came with
one. Then, check your camera manual. With most cameras you simply power
them on and set them to take pictures, with some you need to set them to
something like connect to PC or set PTP. After connecting your camera to
your computer via a USB cable, power the camera on and wait about 15-20
seconds for XP to recognize the camera, you will hear some sound "ding-dong"
and the LCD screen on your camera will change (the change is dependent on
the type of camera you have) and you are now ready to transfer, even if the
Autoplay window does not open automatically. If you do not hear a sound or
the LCD screen of your camera does not change, the connection with the USB
port is not correct. Go to the bottom of these directions to repair the USB
connection (even if you hear the sound, the USB connection may need repair).



After you hear the sound:

1. Open My Computer, look under Devices with removable storage. Your camera
(or card reader) will be listed there as an external drive with a drive
letter E, F, G or H (probably listed below your CD drive). Right click on
your camera listed as an external drive. A menu will open, click on Autoplay
listed on the opening menu. This should open the Autoplay window to download
your photos the same way as when the Autoplay window opens automatically
when you connect your camera.

If you want to keep Real Player 10, this would be another way to do it. The
Autoplay will not open when you connect your camera but you can still get
the Autoplay from your camera listed as an external drive.



Or



2. Open My Computer, look under Devices with removable storage. Your camera
will be listed there as an external drive (probably listed below your CD
drive). Double click on it to open it.
You will see a folder (DCIM), double click to open it, then another folder,
double
click on it to open it and you will see the list of photo files. Select all
files
and copy to a folder on your hard drive. To select all the files, hold the
Ctrl key down and press the letter A. Or, click on Edit on your top bar and
then click on Select all on the opening menu. When files are selected, their
names are highlighted in blue. You can then look at the menu on the left
of the file names and click on Copy and then select the folder you want or
make a new folder to save the files into it.

If you want to repair the automatic Autoplay window (and you do not have
Real Player 10) you can try the following.

Different ways to try to repair the Autoplay window for downloading from
either a camera or card reader.

Go from steps I to V, although step V may not be needed.

I. Connect your camera (or card reader) to your computer, and make sure you
have
pictures on your memory card. Make sure your batteries are good or better
yet, use your AC adapter if your camera came with one. If you are trying
with a card reader, just connect it with a memory card inserted and with
pictures on the memory card. Power the camera on, wait 10-15 seconds for XP
to recognize it, you should hear a sound and the LCD screen of your camera
will change, the change is dependent on the type of camera you have. With a
card reader, just wait for the sound after you connect it.

Click on My Computer and look under Device with Removable storage. Your
camera (or card reader) will be listed there, probably below your CD drive,
and a drive letter will be assigned to it (something like H, G, etc.) You
will use this drive letter in a step below, so just note down what the drive
letter is. With a card reader you may see multiple drives, depending upon
the card reader you have (you may have a card reader capable of reading a CF
card, SD card, Memory stick, etc. each one will have a drive letter so
select the drive letter corresponding to the memory card you have, or select
any of the drive letters for it and it should still work regardless of the
type of card you have).
If you do not see your camera or card reader listed there you will need to
repair your USB
connection (see below for repair) or you are on a network and the network
drive is Z and XP cannot assign a drive letter to your camera. You will need
to take care of this
first. The steps below will NOT work if XP cannot assign a drive letter for
your camera or card reader. In some cases, your camera may be listed but
with no drive letter. Try the drive letter after the CD or DVD drive under
which your camera is listed.

II. Click on Start, click on Run and type the following in the textbox:
REGSVR32 SHIMGVW.DLL
and press Enter
Note that there is a space between ...32 and SHI...
This will take a few seconds to run and you will get a "success" message.

III. Download the autofix.exe file from the site below. At this Microsoft
site, you have the option of downloading the autofix.exe file in one of your
folder (or make a new folder and save the file there), then open the folder
and double click on the file and then follow directions on the screen. Or,
let Microsoft scan your computer to make the repair. You will need your
camera drive letter during this step. After this, reboot your computer.
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...b6-e8fa-45c4-a171-1b389cfacdad&DisplayLang=en

You can leave your camera on and attached or your card reader attached while
you reboot. However, better to disconnected the camera or card reader after
you turn your computer of and then reboot.



IV. After rebooting, connect the camera and power it on (or connect the card
reader) wait 10-15 seconds for XP to recognize it, you should hear some
beeping sound and the Autoplay window should now open giving you the option
of downloading photos from the camera or card reader.


V. You may have to set the options for this window.
Click on My Computer, your camera (or card reader) should be listed there
under Devices with Removable Storage. Right click on it and click on
Properties. In the opening window, click on the Autoplay tab and under
Select, scroll to Pictures to
select it. Select the button Prompt me...



Another possible solution.

Click on Start, click on Run and type the following in the opening textbox:

cmd

and press the Enter key

A window will open (black and white) and will display the following:

C:\Documents and Settings\Your Name\

Type the following at the end of the above line after the \

Net start stisvc

And press the Enter key

You will get a message that service is already started (if so this does not
solve the problem) or that it is starting (if so this may solve the
problem). Then try connecting your camera after you close this window. To
close this window, type EXIT at the end of the displayed line and press the
Enter key.



Also received this solution from Bob Wight on March 14, 2005:



I finally found out the problem. I have a Lexmark printer and it has some
software it loads on start-up. I disabled that software on start-up and the
camera worked. The Lexmark software was partially taking control of the
camera. I have been using the camera and the printer for about six months
with no problem. I am assuming the Lexmark software updated itself and then
the problem started. The printer works fine without the program loading on
start-up. Thanks so much for your help. Many times, bouncing ideas around
can help resolve an issue and you definitely helped.



To repair your USB, you need to reach Device Manager.



Open My Computer>Control Panel>Performance>System>Hardware>Device Manger

You will see a list.

Scroll down to Universal Serial bus controller

Your device should be listed there (right click on it and Properties if you
are not sure about a device on this list) and you can then reach the
Troubleshooter.

Is there a yellow flag in front of the listed device? This indicate that the
device is not working properly. Right click on it, Properties and try the
Troubleshooter. If this does not work, return to the Device Manager window,
click on Action on the top bar and uninstall.

Remove your memory card from the card reader or camera.

Reboot your computer.

XP should recognize your card reader or camera and automatically install the
driver.

Place your memory card in the card reader or camera, wait 15-16 seconds, you
should hear some sound indicating the connection is made. A window should
open, the Autoplay window to download your picture. If this does not happen,
open My Computer, your device should be listed there. Double click on it to
open it and the folders until you see your photo files and copy them to your
hard drive.



Last resort: buy a USB card reader for about $25.00 and use this to transfer
the photo from your camera memory card.
 
A

aren

I am having a very similar problem with my DX7590. In the Easyshare
install, I only installed the "Kodak camera connection software". In
prior Windows XP builds, that would give me the drive letter to the
camera (when I connected it) but none of the other crap I don't need.

When I put my camera on the dock and press the connect button on the
dock, Windows recognizes my camera. A new "Universal Serial Bus
controller" device comes up in Device Manager called "KODAK DX7590 Zoom
Digital Camera" (Driver Provider: Eastman Kodak, Driver Date:
6/14/2002, Driver Version: 6/14/2002), and it has no yellow exclamation
mark. However, no drive letter appears, and the Scanner and Camera
Wizard can't detect that a camera is attached.

None of Yves's suggestions worked for me. I uninstalled RealPlayer 10.
I have also tried running the Kodak Clean utility, but that didn't
work, either. (All that utility seems to do is automatically execute
the uninstall programs, which I could do anyway through Add/Remove
Programs.)

What else can I try?
 
J

John Inzer

I am having a very similar problem with my DX7590. In the
Easyshare install, I only installed the "Kodak camera
connection software". In prior Windows XP builds, that
would give me the drive letter to the camera (when I
connected it) but none of the other crap I don't need.

When I put my camera on the dock and press the connect
button on the dock, Windows recognizes my camera. A new
"Universal Serial Bus controller" device comes up in
Device Manager called "KODAK DX7590 Zoom Digital Camera"
(Driver Provider: Eastman Kodak, Driver Date: 6/14/2002,
Driver Version: 6/14/2002), and it has no yellow
exclamation mark. However, no drive letter appears, and
the Scanner and Camera Wizard can't detect that a camera
is attached.

None of Yves's suggestions worked for me. I uninstalled
RealPlayer 10. I have also tried running the Kodak Clean
utility, but that didn't work, either. (All that utility
seems to do is automatically execute the uninstall
programs, which I could do anyway through Add/Remove
Programs.)

What else can I try?
==============================

Have you tried Kodak Support?

KODAK EASYSHARE DX7590
Zoom Digital Camera Support
http://tinyurl.com/j69ne

--

*********Notice***********
This is not tech support
........I am a volunteer.......

Solutions that work for
me may not work for you.

Proceed at your own risk.

John Inzer
Picture It! MVP

Digital Image
Highlights and FAQs
http://tinyurl.com/aczzp

Need a Web Host?
*******Consider********
Annex Technologies
http://www.annex.com/
**************************
 
J

John Inzer

FWIW...my personal method to clear this
up would be to purchase a USB card reader
(which will be recognized as a Removable
Disk with it's own drive letter) and download
directly to a folder on my hard drive from there.
IOW...bypass all of the Kodak software/hardware
and do a simple copy/paste...drag/drop directly
from the card to my harddrive.

--

*********Notice***********
This is not tech support
........I am a volunteer.......

Solutions that work for
me may not work for you.

Proceed at your own risk.

John Inzer
Picture It! MVP

Digital Image
Highlights and FAQs
http://tinyurl.com/aczzp

Need a Web Host?
*******Consider********
Annex Technologies
http://www.annex.com/
**************************:
 
A

aren

I have read in too many places that Kodak's support will probably blame
Windows XP and refuse to help. So I am not inclined to bother.

Interestingly, if I go to Disk Management, both my hard drives show up,
but they have no drive letters. The CD-ROM shows up, and it does have a
drive letter.

I wonder if this is related to my problem?
 
A

aren

Now it gets even more strange.

On a totally different computer, one on which I have never connected my
DX7590 or any camera for that matter, I first installed the DX7590
drivers, selecting to only install "Kodak camera connection software."
(I.e., I did not install "Kodak EasyShare software," "Kodak software
updater," or "Kodak EasyShare printer dock or photo printer.")

I then hooked up the camera, and I get the exact same symptoms: the
system recognizes the camera OK, but I never get a drive letter for it,
and Scanner and Camera wizard is unable to detect a camera.

I wonder if something is up with this camera?
 
G

Guest

Hi there,

I have found the so called solution to my problem but unfortunately it's a
whole new problem. Kodak was very nice when I called them but it apparently
has to do with my VIA card and drivers and Hightech Excalibur Radeon 9550SE?
They even emailed me some information on how to fix the problem so now I am
struggling to get the correct updates.
 
A

aren

Interesting. What did they recommend?

I am going to go ahead and try the support option. We'll see what they
find!
 
A

aren

SOLVED!

According to Kodak tech support, Kodak disabled the drive letter with
EasyShare 6. That is, your camera connects, and the computer recognizes
it just fine (it shows up in Device Manager), but no drive letter
appears. I regained the drive letter by "downgrading" to EasyShare 5.

I think the main EasyShare software is gimmicky crap, so I don't use
it.

You can get EasyShare 5 at http://www.kodak.com/go/ess5/
 

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