![]() ![]() I ZunesĪ Boot Camp reboot later and I had the phone plumbed into Zune. Maybe it’s another app causing trouble, but one thing seemed certain, getting a recent Windows Phone 7 update onto my HTC Trophy wasn’t going to be happening with Windows Phone 7 Connector for Mac. I’m no coder, but I’m guessing it’s not good news when I get this every time:Įxception Type: EXC_BREAKPOINT (SIGTRAP) Exception Codes: 0x0000000000000002, 0x0000000000000000 Crashed Thread: 6 Dispatch queue: -priorityĪpplication Specific Information: *** Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInternalInconsistencyException', reason: 'Invalid parameter not satisfying: aString != nil' Going through the motions to apply the update resulted in an instant app crash. It detected there was an update, but installing it was another matter. ![]() However, Windows Phone 7 Connector for Mac didn’t play nice on this occasion. This time, I was more hopeful despite there being no information about the version. With your iPhone connected via the USB-to-Lightning cable you'll be able to select items to sync between the phone and the computer.Mango crushed: Windows Phone Connector for Mac retires earlyĪ few days ago, my phone started nagging me about updates again. To move photos from your computer to your iPhone requires iTunes. You can either go through the Phone Companion app, which then imports from your Windows phone into the Photos app, or you can just navigate to your phone in File Explorer, find the folder and drag and drop. If you're using a Windows 10 PC getting your photos off your phone is straightforward. If you can't or simply don't want to use the cloud, you can still make the transfer using a good, old-fashioned cable. You'll be snapping a ton with the iPhone camera so don't fill up that storage with gigabytes of old stuff. With no expandable physical storage on the iPhone, we strongly recommend the cloud route if you want to have easy access to all of the photos you've been collecting on your Windows phone. Make sure everything has uploaded then grab the Dropbox app for iPhone and you'll be set.ĭownload Dropbox for iOS (opens in new tab) Or, if you use Dropbox, the other big, cross-platform popular option, same applies. With this, you just need to install the OneDrive app from the App Store and you'll have instant access to all your photos wherever you are.ĭownload OneDrive for iOS (opens in new tab) You can also upload your iPhone photos to OneDrive, so you don't have to switch from what you're familiar and comfortable with. If you didn't have it set this way, there's still time to do so and upload your entire photo library to Microsoft's cloud. If you've been using Windows 10 Mobile then there's a strong chance you had your phone set to auto-upload your photo library to OneDrive. You can opt to start fresh, or better still, backup all your photos to your computer and your favorite online service, and then go from there. ![]() (Apple uses the iCloud Photo Library service instead - for a price.) Not least because on Windows Mobile you may have been using a microSD card to store them on, something not supported on the iPhone without needing extra peripherals and apps. Our recommendation would be to avoid transferring your photo library from your old phone to your new one. ![]()
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