In that case, again go to Settings > Photos and change the transfer setting to Original and try again. He established his own studio in 1995, and now paints full time. The other possibility is that while you’re capturing images and videos in the compatible, older formats, your phone or tablet is exporting the wrong format. A collection by Scottish artist Daniel Campbell Born in Glasgow in 1951, Daniel studied at Glasgow School of Art and Glasgow College of Building and Printing. You should be able to switch to Image Capture on your Mac, import the incompatible files, and then use a conversion tool, like iMazing HEIC Converter (free) for images, which runs on macOS 10.9 and later, and the free VLC, which lets you open and convert HEVC files.
Outputs acquire media from inputs to produce useful data, such as movie files. Inputs are sources of media, including capture devices like the cameras and microphones built into an iOS device or Mac. IOS lets you choose how media is transferred, but Automatic doesn’t seem to make the correct choice for all users. The main parts of the capture architecture are sessions, inputs, and outputs: Capture sessions connect one or more inputs to one or more outputs. However, in Settings > Photos the Transfer to Mac or PC option can be set to Automatic, and an iPhone or iPad should export them in a readable format when your Mac tries to import them, bypassing the compatibility issue. If you have High Efficiency enabled, a Mac with Sierra or earlier installed can’t import the images without conversion. (Technically, HEVC is H.265 video, where the previous flavor is the more widely supported H.264 encoding both are packaged into a MOV file by iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, which is a generic video package format, rather than an encoding type.) If it’s set to High Efficiency, then the newer compressed formats are in use Most Compatible, and the iPhone uses JPEG and H.264 video. Check your camera settings in Settings > Camera > Formats.