Please contact the photo service provider and ask them "How to save the photos to your computer hard drive?" Your chosen photo service will have this option available to you as either "save local option" or you can right click on the image and click "Save As" to save to your computer folder. To access your photos from a shared internet folder or an internet photo service, you will need to download the photo to your harddrive and save it on your computer. My photos are stored with a different service. If they don't, you'll need to upload the photos to Smilebox from your computer. You'd need to check on Smilebox to see if they have an import tool. I have a parent who has shared photos with me to use in a Teacher's scrapbook that weĪre presenting her as a gift, but i am not able to figure out how to get the photos from Flickr to Smilebox whoch is what I am using to make the pages for the book. How do I get photos from a Flickr account to a Smilebox account? How to use the 3-month Adobe free plan for pro members if not in the USįlickr and 3rd-party Social Media Management My Stats page is rolling over at midnight UTC instead of midnight local time Welcome to the Flickr Help Forum! Click here to get started and to read our
Flickr forever: Creating the safest most inclusive Discontinuation of the Photostream Edit Pages Rolling out a new and improved stats experience. I would get the dreaded not enough storage or memory error if I had more than about 8 pictures.In the end, I just used the 'Photos' app on an old Macbook and it was so much easier and not a single problem.This thread was closed automatically due to a lack of responses over the last month. I had a collection of photos taken with a smartphone camera and a canon point-and-shoot camera.First of all, there is no support for the standard widescreen video format, so I had to use the suggested hack of tricking Photo Story by stretching/distorting the images (I couldn't even find an image editor that could do this, so I used ImageMagick from the command line).After all that trouble, it couldn't even handle my pictures. No native support for widescreen, and una ble to process more than a few smartphone image files without error.I wanted to make a slideshow to display on a widescreen TV, using 'Ken Burns' effects. Unable to handle modern image file sizes and no widescreen support. So, if you want a quick way to create stand-out photo presentations, Microsoft Photo Story is well worth downloading. There are applications, such as ProShow, that contain burning options and support for higher resolution output, but there's not much that can match Photo Story in terms of its ease of use and automated features. It's a shame that Microsoft Photo Story does'’t support burning DVDs and VCDs with the created slideshow, and you’ll need your own DVD authoring app to do this.
Unfortunately, however, the output movies from the software are not as sharp as they’d be in VCD or DVD format.
You can choose from various resolutions in order to optimize your slideshow. Output from Microsoft Photo Story is in Microsoft's WMV file format, which is more compressed than MPEGs or other movie type files. You can pick from a bumper range of music genres, tempos, instruments and effects, giving you the chance to match the audio precisely to the mood of your show. For instance, you can build your own custom soundtracks for your slideshow. While you can simply sit back and let Microsoft Photo Story do everything for you, there's still plenty you can play around with if you’re feeling adventurous. What's more, the ones generated by default look great. The fact is, you don’t need to tweak a whole bunch of settings because the program does it for you, automatically generating transitions and zoom/pans without you having to set it up yourself. Applying such features can prove tricky in some programs, but not in Microsoft Photo Story.