V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 735
4.
Use the Direction pad to navigate to
MTP/PTP
and
press the
>
key to select it.
õ
Connect your D300 to the PC as follows (assumes the
computer is already configured and on
166
, and Nikon Transfer
has been installed):
1.
Turn the camera off.
2.
Plug one end of the USB cable into the connector on
the lower left of the camera (it’s under the bottom
rubber door). The other end plugs into the appropriate
connector on your computer. (You can’t get the
connections backwards; only one end fits the camera,
only one end fits your computer.)
3.
Turn the camera on.
4.
The computer should recognize the camera and start
up a transfer operation if you have everything
166
If the D300 is connected to the computer and turned on when you boot (or reboot)
your PC running Windows XP or Windows 2000, the computer may see the camera
as a mass storage device and perform an integrity check of the “drive” (card in the
camera). This is problematic for two reasons. First,
do
not
cancel any such disk scan
(usually accompanied by information about scan progress on a blue screen prior to
the Windows main screen appearing) and
do not
reboot. If you interrupt the disk
scan, it appears that the formatting of the card can be corrupted. But note that
depending upon how large the card in the camera is, you may be waiting a
considerable amount of time for the disk scan to complete (measured in minutes).
Note that this may be true for some earlier versions of Windows as well—especially if
you have “disk health” utilities installed—but I haven’t been able to verify it as I no
longer have any systems running older versions of Windows. Is there a way around
this problem? Yes, don’t have your camera connected to the computer when you
boot!