2015-09-14

You plug your iPhone into your Mac, and Photos launches—but you don’t want that! There’s a way to stop this behavior.




Glenn Fleishman | @GlennF

Senior Contributor, Macworld

Mike Kahn converted one iPhotos library to Photos in OS X. Now, every time he plugs in his iPhone, Photos launches, requiring him to quit and then launch iPhoto. He’d like to revert to iPhoto being the default choice.

Apple likes to hide its browser, mail, and iOS-attached launch preferences in funny places. You set your default browser in Safari, meaning you have to launch Safari to stop launching Safari in the future (Safari > Preferences > General, Set Default Browser); same with Mail and mail (Mail > Preferences > General, Default Email Reader).

Where do you find the find the photo-app launching preference? Not in Photos or iPhoto, as you’d expect! Instead, launch Applications > Image Capture, a very useful utility that can work with iOS devices, inserted SD cards, attached cameras, and networked scanners.



Image Capture lets you a pick an app (or no app) to open when a device is attached to your Mac.

Attach your iOS device.

Select it in the left navigation bar in Image Capture.

At the lower left, you’ll see your device’s name, the message “Connecting This [description] Opens:”, and a pop-up menu. (If that doesn’t appear, make sure the tiny panel button at the extreme lower left has an arrow pointing up, not down.)

Choose your desired app or No Application.

For Mike, it should read Photos, and can be changed to iPhoto.

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Glenn Fleishman Senior Contributor

Glenn Fleishman is the author of A Practical Guide to Networking and Security in iOS 8, and a senior contributor to Macworld, where he writes the Private I and Mac 911 columns. He is also a regular contributor to the Economist, Fast Company, and Boing Boing.
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