Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - How to quickly transfer photos from the mobile phone to the computer?

How to quickly transfer photos from the mobile phone to the computer?

How to transfer photos from mobile phone to computer;

Connect the computer and the mobile phone through the data cable.

Open the phone book in my computer. Open "My Computer"-"Scanner/Camera Drive Letter", plug in the data cable and find the newly added mobile drive letter on the computer.

Copy files to your computer. In the mobile phone drive, find the photo directory, select the photos to be backed up to the computer, and copy and paste them into the computer.

A photo refers to a photo of a person or thing that is exposed with photosensitive paper under a photographic negative and then developed and fixed.

The first photo was created by the French inventor Joseph Nicéphore Niépce in 1826.

184 1 year, William Henry Fox Talbot, an Englishman (1800- 1877) published "Carlo Photography", which made a negative that could be copied many times, laying a foundation for the photography process of modern photography. In China, photography was introduced to China by western missionaries in the Qing Dynasty. In the early years of the Republic of China, many businesses with this industry began to rise.

The oldest photo in Japan is Koichi Tanaka, which was taken in 1854, and the photography technology was officially introduced to Japan in 1905. Taiwan Province Province introduced photography technology during the Japanese occupation period, so it followed the Japanese translation of title photos.

In the streets and alleys, shops that take this as their profession are called photo studios. However, after the 1950 s, the Kuomintang moved to Taiwan Province and changed its name to photography, photo studio and photo studio. It was not until the 1980' s that the Japanese entertainment circle opened, and the word "photo studio" flourished again.

/kloc-in the 1990s, the original negative and camera photography technology was gradually replaced by digital electronic technology.