In the Import window, select the Photos library that contains the photos and videos that you want to import, then click Review for Import. To import selected photos, select the photos to import, then click Import Selected.
Save space by deleting the previous library After you confirm that your photos imported successfully, you can save space by deleting the library that you no longer need. Published Date: October 25, Yes No. Let's start by assuming that I have a perfectly compatible file. Now, there are many ways to transfer and watch the the video, but I can't find a single darn way to save it with my other videos and photos:.
The solution is to open iTunes, click on your iPhone, go to the Photos tab, then Sync Photos for the folder that contains the photo and video subfolders you want to sync.
Furthermore, apps that can access the Camera Roll almost always can also access Synced Albums, so this should really work well for you. I keep a whole bunch of old photos and videos on my iPhone at all times using this method and it works great. As a bonus, unlike the Camera Roll, these Synced Albums don't get backed up in iTunes, so it won't slow down your Backup like a growing Camera Roll will. Apparently the only way to get a video into a Photos app on ios If you import video through the iTunes it will end up in the Videos application.
You are missing nothing obvious. Currently, I have to shoot video from a camera that works with the camera connection kit for iPad since that is the only way to get video into the photo roll at present. The camera connector kit won't work to import video from iPhone to iPad. The SD card reader won't let your iPhone write out video to a card.
As you've discovered, no app has the ability to add video to the camera roll other than calling the built in camera to capture it and store it in the roll. I've looked over the iCloud and iOS5 announcements closely, and even though it looks like video you capture will get backed up to the cloud as part of the nightly wifi application data backups, the Photo Stream demonstration very carefully mentioned Photo all the time and no videos were present in any of the files.
I don't know for sure, but it doesn't look like anything is announced to change this in the near future. I have submitted a bug report against iMovie for iOS and perhaps if enough people do, it might get added. Also, consumer feedback might help too. I personally don't care if I can use wifi or bluetooth device to device, use the camera connector kit, go through the cloud.
The easiest way is to use an app that allows you to download from the account "Dropbox" and save to camera roll. I use "Downloads Free" by LS apps. It has its own browser. Navigate to your Dropbox account online. Select your video and download it. It gets saved under the files folder. Select your video and select save to photos option. Photos refers to the Camera Roll. It works well for me. Suppose you do not want to use a computer or any other apple devices. Sometimes there is an option to save to photos directly.
But what do you do when you don't have an internet connection? Fortunately, there is a way to download videos directly to your iPhone. If you upload videos to those sites as a form of a backup, then downloading your own personal videos would not violate any copyright laws. Saving videos from the internet can take up a lot of space on your iPhone. For the sake of this article, Safari will be the primary app you use.
And by default, Safari saves downloads to the Files app, either storing them directly on your device or in a Downloads folder in your iCloud Drive.
If you have another cloud service set up with the Files app, like Dropbox or Google Drive, you can set those to be your download locations. The video download feature has been added to Safari in iOS A less elegant, but sometimes the only way to save a video to your iPhone is to record your iPhone's screen while playing the clip. Downloading videos from YouTube is very similar to downloading them from Facebook.
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