That's what it was, Matt. I remembered that this was an issue before (though I'd never tried
not to import the photos before), but I couldn't remember the details or if it was fixable (and I couldn't find the thread in a brief search).
That's really too bad... I know there is
some way around it, of course, because a ton of other 3rd party applications
can import properly from the iPhone, including Windows 7's Photo Importer itself (and Lightroom and so on and so forth). I remember back on the old thread I found there was a newfangled replacement for WIA available from Microsoft, so it is probably related to that somehow.
In any case... This has
got to be a common user-facing issue (most popular camera on Flickr and all of that). You were looking for "polish" ideas... If it can't be fixed without a major undertaking, MC needs to disable those options and explain how it
does work (what the limits are and how it can be expected to behave) when any WIA-only device is attached and selected.
Importing content on a client instead of the server may also cause troubles. Clients don't currently have the ability to upload to the server.
FWIW... This part of it worked fine. Of course, the client
is set to download the photos to my M:\ drive on the network, and that's where MC monitors the new files anyway (though it didn't seem to re-auto-import the pictures). In any case, this worked. It probably would fail if I was trying to import without having the network drive mapped though.
I have no problem bringing in pictures and movies from the iPhone to MC, but I use a simple approach.
1) I copy the pictures and movies from the iPhone to the PC using explorer (no import software)
2) I Then delete the pictures and movies from the iPhone using explorer
3) I then import the pictures to MC
Yeah, that's what I did (after finding and deleting what MC imported). But that's too complex and fiddly of a process for me to easily teach my wife how to do it. I'm going to just find another application to use for importing photos, and then have MC monitor those file locations. Probably Lightroom, but I'm not sure. If Bridge handles it nicely, I'll just use that, since it is already installed on most of my machines.