kdrime

Q: how to disable photos

I don't want Photos opening when I inserts an SD card. How to prevent this?

 

I am a full grown person and figure I should be the one deciding what app/program opens when. Never used iPhoto and I have no intention of ever using Photo.

Thanks!

iMac, Mac OS X (10.1.x)

Posted on Apr 20, 2015 8:52 AM

Close

Q: how to disable photos

  • All replies
  • Helpful answers

Previous Page 2 of 3 last Next
  • by fotodocent,

    fotodocent fotodocent Nov 29, 2015 4:00 AM in response to Terence Devlin
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Nov 29, 2015 4:00 AM in response to Terence Devlin

    Thank you kindly for that bit. Shame that Apple makes this as mysterious and un-obvious as it is

  • by Terence Devlin,

    Terence Devlin Terence Devlin Nov 29, 2015 5:24 AM in response to fotodocent
    Level 10 (139,470 points)
    iLife
    Nov 29, 2015 5:24 AM in response to fotodocent

    I have no idea what you're talking about.

  • by fotodocent,

    fotodocent fotodocent Nov 29, 2015 10:44 AM in response to Terence Devlin
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Nov 29, 2015 10:44 AM in response to Terence Devlin

    This is a second reply to Terence Devlin who answered a forum poster 'kdrime' on the issue of disabling Photo from opening upon insertion of photo media in the Mac. I don't know why but I do not find my earlier post here, to which Mr. Devlin had replied he didn't know what I was talking about.

     

    Since I cannot find that post of mine here now, please allow me to try again. And hope this response follows in context with the discussions I found above including the helpful instruction on disabling Photo from activating.

     

    I heartily agree with the original poster that I am an adult and that I prefer to decide which apps activate under what circumstances. Therefor it was frustrating to see Photo (or 'Foto' here in Italy) activate automatically, and to NOT find a Preference, that is an item one looks for in the drop down menu inder the app name, FOTO in this case, by which one could impose one's own magisterial will upon this snarkily unruly app

     

    No, it requires taking the next step to do exactly what this user does not want Foto to do: import photos. Only then does one discover, cleverly peeking out of the upper margin of the import window, the checkbox to turn off this behavior.


    That is what I consider not-obvious and poor app design. It's a PREFERENCE: let it be found in the preference MENU.

     

    Thank you. I hope you will see now what I am talking about, kind sir.

  • by Akiba-Seattle,

    Akiba-Seattle Akiba-Seattle Dec 4, 2015 4:11 PM in response to nico206
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Dec 4, 2015 4:11 PM in response to nico206

    Does not work for me on El Capitan... Any ideas why?

  • by DianeFromPA08,

    DianeFromPA08 DianeFromPA08 Dec 18, 2015 12:09 PM in response to Akiba-Seattle
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Dec 18, 2015 12:09 PM in response to Akiba-Seattle

    I'm grateful to hear you say this. I'm having the same issue. Followed the directions very carefully and several times, but have still had the "Photos" thing pop up.

  • by tricktronix,

    tricktronix tricktronix Dec 18, 2015 6:48 PM in response to Ih8appl
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Dec 18, 2015 6:48 PM in response to Ih8appl

    i've found a way to delete photos completely!

    right click 'show package contents', select the 'contents' folder and 'move to trash'. goodbye photos!

    now you will have iphoto open when you insert your camera/card. no problem, do exactly the same thing. goodbye iphoto!

    now image capture will open by default. hurray! the simplest app is all I need.

     

    so the photos and iphoto icon will still be there but you will not be able to open them. if you want to really really want to delete the app icons you can use 'Clean my Mac 3' to uninstall it completely.

     

    I just want to manage my photos in my own folders, in my own way. I don't need some dumb app to hide them away into a million nested folders concealed within a package. im a professional photographer, not a school child.

     

  • by Terence Devlin,

    Terence Devlin Terence Devlin Dec 18, 2015 11:29 PM in response to tricktronix
    Level 10 (139,470 points)
    iLife
    Dec 18, 2015 11:29 PM in response to tricktronix

    Couple of things:

     

    1. Photos will be reinstalled with the next OS update.

     

    2. Never let Clean My Mac 3 anywhere near your mac if you value it and your data.

     

    3. Both Photos and iPhoto (and indeed Aperture) can manage referenced Libraries, where you can put your photos into folders as you prefer. Even if you don't, it takes most people a couple of minutes to figure put things like the export command for getting data out of these libraries.

  • by léonie,

    léonie léonie Dec 18, 2015 11:45 PM in response to tricktronix
    Level 10 (105,312 points)
    iLife
    Dec 18, 2015 11:45 PM in response to tricktronix

    i've found a way to delete photos completely!

    right click 'show package contents', select the 'contents' folder and 'move to trash'. goodbye photos!

    That should not be possible on El Capitan, because even an administrator is not allowed to delete system files and to modify system applications.

    The System Integrity Protection will kick in. If you try that, you should be seeing this alert:

    Screen Shot 2015-12-19 at 08.39.16GMT.png

    if you disabled the System Integrity protection, so the contents of application bundles can be modified, enable it again. It is meant to prevent malware from installing itself.

  • by tricktronix,

    tricktronix tricktronix Dec 19, 2015 7:35 PM in response to Terence Devlin
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Dec 19, 2015 7:35 PM in response to Terence Devlin

    2. Never let Clean My Mac 3 anywhere near your mac if you value it and your data.

    too late... why not? what is wrong with this app?

     

    3. Both Photos and iPhoto (and indeed Aperture) can manage referenced Libraries, where you can put your photos into folders as you prefer. Even if you don't, it takes most people a couple of minutes to figure put things like the export command for getting data out of these libraries.

    i never liked either app. trying to import photos takes forever. doing the same thing with image capture takes a fraction of the time. why would i want to import my photos and then have to export them again? i just want to get my photos from my phone or sd card onto my computer and then edit them in photoshop. of course this is very intuitive with photos, you just import into photos, then export each photo to make duplicate copy and then open it in photoshop and then reimport it back into photos. so simple (not).

    sure it's a great app if you don't want to think about anything (ie you are technologically challenged) and you want to backup to iCloud.

    i have a free 1TB account with flickr so im not in the slightest bit interested in paying for iCloud.

  • by tricktronix,

    tricktronix tricktronix Dec 19, 2015 7:47 PM in response to léonie
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Dec 19, 2015 7:47 PM in response to léonie

    léonie wrote:

     

    i've found a way to delete photos completely!

    right click 'show package contents', select the 'contents' folder and 'move to trash'. goodbye photos!

    That should not be possible on El Capitan, because even an administrator is not allowed to delete system files and to modify system applications.

    The System Integrity Protection will kick in. If you try that, you should be seeing this alert:

    Screen Shot 2015-12-19 at 08.39.16GMT.png

    if you disabled the System Integrity protection, so the contents of application bundles can be modified, enable it again. It is meant to prevent malware from installing itself.

    Oh goody, I love error messages, they feed my soul. I am still using yosemite. When I updated to yosemite it broke more things than it fixed. Boy was it fun to have my laptop freeze several times while I was DJing in front of 100's of people. Boy am I glad that quick look has been totally nerfed. For sure I will not be updating to el capitan anytime soon.

  • by Terence Devlin,

    Terence Devlin Terence Devlin Dec 20, 2015 12:22 AM in response to tricktronix
    Level 10 (139,470 points)
    iLife
    Dec 20, 2015 12:22 AM in response to tricktronix

    Clean My Mac has a long and illustrious history of borking OS X installations and damaging user data. It offers no service that you actually need routinely. (Was it installed when you had those problems upgrading?) Search the forum of the hundreds (and hundreds) of threads on this app.

     

    That you never liked iPhoto or Photos is good for you. I was writing for the benefit of other folks. The fact that other folks prefer other workflows means they have made their own choices, not that they are technically challenged.

  • by tricktronix,

    tricktronix tricktronix Dec 20, 2015 3:24 AM in response to Terence Devlin
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Dec 20, 2015 3:24 AM in response to Terence Devlin

    Terence Devlin wrote:

     

    Clean My Mac has a long and illustrious history of borking OS X installations and damaging user data. It offers no service that you actually need routinely. (Was it installed when you had those problems upgrading?) Search the forum of the hundreds (and hundreds) of threads on this app.

     

    No, clean my mac had nothing to do with the problems that yosemite caused. I only installed it few days ago so that I could clear out all the junk that osx has been hoarding, including all my mail and attachments since the beginning of time.  I didn't really need all of those chain emails from the early 2000's stashed on my computer anyway. This is getting extremely off topic btw.

  • by MajorGiroux,

    MajorGiroux MajorGiroux Jan 26, 2016 8:12 AM in response to konzy
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 26, 2016 8:12 AM in response to konzy

    I figure that you must mean in a terminal but it did not work for me even after a reboot.

     

    As a developer I have over 50 iDevices that I need to connect once in a while and every time that we do a reset to factory the box pops up. It really is a pain and I cannot believe the OS makers did not see the possibilities that developers or photographers would use their OS.

  • by MajorGiroux,

    MajorGiroux MajorGiroux Jan 26, 2016 8:14 AM in response to fotodocent
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 26, 2016 8:14 AM in response to fotodocent

    still missing the ability to disable it now and for all future devices that you can connect.

  • by LarryHN,

    LarryHN LarryHN Jan 26, 2016 8:18 AM in response to MajorGiroux
    Level 10 (84,066 points)
    Photos for Mac
    Jan 26, 2016 8:18 AM in response to MajorGiroux

    And you still need to address that with Apple - http://www.apple.com/feedback/photos.html

     

    LN

Previous Page 2 of 3 last Next