Hi Damon I have tried both of these options, direct from the camera and
then copying into a directory on the hard drive. Seems to make no
difference. The trigger seems to be multiple input directories. So for
instance if the import directory is /dcim then if I have /dcim/1 and
dcim/2 then it seems to get to the end of the first directory and then
freeze and never get to the next directory.
There is a apport bug on launchpad dont know if that will help
On 11/09/12 19:36, Damon Lynch wrote:
> Are you downloading directly from a camera or are you taking the memory
> card and inserting it into a memory card reader? When downloading
> directly from a camera or a phone, Rapid Photo Downloader uses gnome
> system libraries. The gnome developers do the best but they have bugs.
> A possible workaround is to use Nautilus to copy the files onto your
> desktop, and then use Rapid Photo Downloader to import and rename them
> as you prefer.
>
Hi Damon I have tried both of these options, direct from the camera and
then copying into a directory on the hard drive. Seems to make no
difference. The trigger seems to be multiple input directories. So for
instance if the import directory is /dcim then if I have /dcim/1 and
dcim/2 then it seems to get to the end of the first directory and then
freeze and never get to the next directory.
There is a apport bug on launchpad dont know if that will help
https:/ /bugs.launchpad .net/bugs/ 1048796
On 11/09/12 19:36, Damon Lynch wrote:
> Are you downloading directly from a camera or are you taking the memory
> card and inserting it into a memory card reader? When downloading
> directly from a camera or a phone, Rapid Photo Downloader uses gnome
> system libraries. The gnome developers do the best but they have bugs.
> A possible workaround is to use Nautilus to copy the files onto your
> desktop, and then use Rapid Photo Downloader to import and rename them
> as you prefer.
>
--
Chris Giltnane