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All of the symbols are described and explained in the manual. If you need a copy of the manual, you may download one here. If you're referring to a red flashing clock, that indicates that you need to set the date and time.
There's a cover on the bottom of the camera marked with the USB symbol and the words "A/V OUT". Flip this cover open and connect to a powered USB port.
Please download the manual from this site. You have to register yourself to down load and print it.
OR you can save it on your computer as a pdf document.
Remove battery replace and switch on as you tap on the lens hood, repeat to see if the lens jamming is released. If not you will require the help of Nikon service for the estimation and spare.
Consider NOT connecting your camera to your computer.
The best way to download pictures from your camera to your computer involves removing the memory card from the camera and plugging it into a card reader (either built-in to the computer or connected via USB or FireWire). This is likely to be faster than connecting the camera to the computer, and won't run down your camera's batteries.
Once the card is plugged in, it will appear to your computer as a removable drive. You can use the operating system's drag&drop facility to copy pictures from the card to the computer's hard drive, the same way you copy any other files. Or you can use Nikon Transfer or any other photo cataloging program.
Remove the battery and the camera will shut off. keep the battery off for 12 hours and reinsert back. Remove off the new memory card and switch on with a foramtted memory card.,, maybe the old If the camera resets back to life and functions well then checck if the new memory card has some virrus in the memory, if so scan and delete and format the card.
However if the fault still stays on then you have a fault in the main processor conttroller of the camera which will require extra help.
Hope you take this tip. credit me if this works.
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