Yes. Formatting will destroy all the data on the memory card. Make sure you keep a backup of the data, frequently.
The file formats and extensions jpeg, jpg and gif are used to save pictures. The format and extension bmp refers to files made with Paint and are larger files generally. The format and file extension ttf are archival-quality photos; some people use home scanners but make archival files.
No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.No. It needs to be saved in 2003 format from 2010 to enable 2003 to open it.
Word documents can be saved in their Microsoft format or as a PDF. They can be saved as text which is editable and can be changed at a different date. It can also be saved an image which would not allow for editing but would keep the integrity of the formatting consistent.
Yes they do because it only deletes fully from your phone if you format your memory all together lol.
They are not autmatically saved. Go to your Hotmail and save them as a J peg in your pictures or personal files.
Vector and bitmap, raster or pixel. Type, shapes like circle are vectors and can be saved and edited if they are in .psd or .tif format saved. Pixel, raster or bitmap images can be edited and saved in any format, Photoshop supports almost any format.
Picture are not necessarily saved to "my pictures" automatically. I'd save another picture and look carefully at where it's being saved to. Also, look in 'my documents' and 'downloads' section.
A kitty
You don't. If you do format it you will delete everything on it, including your pictures. I am assuming you have a USB-memory with pictures from a camera? If this is the case the pictures are saved in a lossless format and are usually not viewable by basic programs like Paint etc. Either way: Attach the memory stick to your computer. Go to "My computer" and then into the memory stick. If it does not appear there you may need to refresh the window and wait for the computer to find the memory or install the drivers for the memory so that the computer can see and access it. Once accessed you should find files and or folders. Find out where the pictures are, can be one large file containing several pictures. Google the file extension to find out what software you can use to access the file.
You don't. If you do format it you will delete everything on it, including your pictures. I am assuming you have a USB-memory with pictures from a camera? If this is the case the pictures are saved in a lossless format and are usually not viewable by basic programs like Paint etc. Either way: Attach the memory stick to your computer. Go to "My computer" and then into the memory stick. If it does not appear there you may need to refresh the window and wait for the computer to find the memory or install the drivers for the memory so that the computer can see and access it. Once accessed you should find files and or folders. Find out where the pictures are, can be one large file containing several pictures. Google the file extension to find out what software you can use to access the file.
Yes, you can keep your pictures and usually you can keep the phone.
they may well be in jpeg format but there are other things saved in jpeg other than the pixels of the image, such as camera make, time of capture, aperture etc that can't be controlled manually, which are essential for the camera to recognise images as "it's own", and therefore display them in the playback. I've tried the same thing with my camera.