It's not about the computer software, it's about the camera's firmware. Very few cameras are designed to tether to a computer... mine happens to, it's a Canon t1i but there are very few others.
Check the specs in your owner's manual or with Canon but I don't think so.
"i've got in basic terms have been given approximately 200 or 3 hundred photos on it..." whilst grew to become into the final time you formatted it? in case you have been taking pictures, reproduction them to a working laptop or computing device, then in basic terms deleting them, your memory card is in all probability badly fragmented. format it, then attempt back. which will in all probability do the trick. Peace. edit: Jim, she's already have been given a type 10 card...
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Verified answer
It would seem you can at least shoot remote
"Shooting Modes
(1) Live View shooting
(2) Remote Live View shooting (with a personal computer installed with EOS Utility)"
Actually the answer is yes, using the EOS Utility, you can shoot in movie mode. But the download takes place after you are done shooting.
See page 47 of the EOS Utility manual.
It's not about the computer software, it's about the camera's firmware. Very few cameras are designed to tether to a computer... mine happens to, it's a Canon t1i but there are very few others.
Check the specs in your owner's manual or with Canon but I don't think so.
"i've got in basic terms have been given approximately 200 or 3 hundred photos on it..." whilst grew to become into the final time you formatted it? in case you have been taking pictures, reproduction them to a working laptop or computing device, then in basic terms deleting them, your memory card is in all probability badly fragmented. format it, then attempt back. which will in all probability do the trick. Peace. edit: Jim, she's already have been given a type 10 card...