How to TRANSFER a Photo from USB to Mac Using Terminal Commands - Basic Tutorial | New

  • 2 months ago
How to Transfer a Photo from USB to Mac Using Terminal Commands - Basic Tutorial | New #USBFlashDrive #ComputerScienceVideos #Terminal #TerminalCommands

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00:00Computer Science Videos here today to show you guys, in this tutorial, how to
00:05transfer a photo from a USB flash drive to a Mac computer using terminal on
00:09terminal commands. Without further ado, let us start the video. So in this tutorial, you
00:15need to have access to a Mac computer, a USB flash drive which can have a
00:19capacity of one, two, four, all the way up to one terabyte. We're not really concerned
00:24about that. What we are concerned about is the photo on the USB that we want to
00:29transfer from the flash drive itself to the Mac computer, as well as be able to
00:35use terminal commands in the command prompt on a Mac computer. So we're going
00:40to start the tutorial. So let's now go all the way down to the dock, open up
00:45Finder, take the USB flash drive, insert that into the Mac computer. For those who
00:53are wondering, what type of USB do we require? If you're using USB type C, you
01:00will require the adapter. So let's click on the sidebar, go to locations, click on
01:10Kingston, make sure we have a photo ready to transfer from the USB flash
01:20drive to the desktop itself. Let's now minimize Finder for the moment. Now let's
01:24go all the way down to the dock, again go to Launchpad, search for the command prompt
01:28terminal. Let's now increase the size of the terminal window, as well as the size
01:33of the text. Command plus a couple of times. Now the task would be to, let's
01:39just clear everything on screen for the moment, change directory to desktop, DE
01:46tab, list everything on screen. Let's now move into the Kingston USB. You may be
01:56wondering how do we do that? Well let's just navigate into volumes, go to Kingston,
02:07K, tab, semicolon, ls-l, and now to move the screenshot.png to the desktop, this
02:23is the command, mv screenshot, option n, tilde, slash, desktop, tab. Before we enter,
02:45let's just go all the way down to the dock, go to Finder, decrease the size of the
02:49Finder window. Let's now watch everything happening in real time. So let's just
02:57decrease the size of the Finder, enter, and we will see the screenshot jump from
03:06the Kingston USB to the desktop, and there we go. So let's now close the
03:13Kingston USB for the moment, change directory, clear everything on screen,
03:26quit terminal, go back to the USB, right-click and eject the Kingston USB.
03:43Remove that from the Mac computer. And so that's it for this video. I'll see you guys
03:49in my next tutorial. Thanks for now. Thank you for making it towards the end of the
03:55video. Be sure to subscribe to my channel, Computer Science Videos. Be sure to check
03:59out the previous video on screen now, or you can ideally click on the playlist and
04:06watch all the Journey for Computer Science videos from the start until now.

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