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Post by casioqv100 on Jul 6, 2020 13:47:04 GMT -5
Howdy, I have the camera mentioned, it was my dad's. There are still a few photos on it I'd like to see if I can get off before doing something with it. I've downloaded the QV-Link software, which of course doesn't run on Windows 10, and i do have the QV-Link serial cable for the camera to connect to a PC. I was hoping someone may know how I may be able to retrieve the pictures. Windows doesn't see any devices of course with the camera plugged in, but it is a USB Serial adapter as well. Worse case I have a the video out cable for the camera as well but I'd prefer the photo files.
Thanks for any help!
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Post by casioqv100 on Jul 6, 2020 17:49:33 GMT -5
I got it, here's how in case it can help anyone else. Running Windows 10, I have Hyper-V installed, I created an XP virtual machine and installed QV-Link I shut down the VM, opened the virtual disk in disk management and copied the files from QV-Link. I was able to open the program in Windows 10 and connect to the camera via a USB serial port.
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Post by philbirch on Jul 14, 2020 12:31:59 GMT -5
Howdy, I have the camera mentioned, it was my dad's. There are still a few photos on it I'd like to see if I can get off before doing something with it. I've downloaded the QV-Link software, which of course doesn't run on Windows 10, and i do have the QV-Link serial cable for the camera to connect to a PC. I was hoping someone may know how I may be able to retrieve the pictures. Windows doesn't see any devices of course with the camera plugged in, but it is a USB Serial adapter as well. Worse case I have a the video out cable for the camera as well but I'd prefer the photo files. Thanks for any help! you could have used a card reader. Quicker and no special software
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maisie
Contributing Member
Posts: 18
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Post by maisie on Jun 17, 2021 14:39:56 GMT -5
Very nice shots. Continue to celebrate the photography
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