I don't have a Fuji, so it might be different. But with Minolta, Nikon, Pentax, Olympus, Panasonic and Casio you can view photos taken with any camera.
The main requirement is that the file names have to be in a digital camera format. This is usually up to four capital letters followed by digits. My Casio for instance takes photos with a CMG1304.jpg file name. it will display Panasonic photos with a P1001241.jpg file name. It will NOT display a photo with a Zoe & Miriah.jpg file name. This seems to be true for all of my digital cameras.
I have read that with some cameras you can't strip the EXIF. This isn't true for any of my current cameras.
I always put the photos I want on the card back in the folder where the camera stores the photos I take. My Casio has internal memory and is set up for having a permanent photo album, so I can display images from a special folder. For most cameras you would probably do best storing the images you want to view in the sub-folder where the camera puts the pictures.
The main requirement is that the file names have to be in a digital camera format. This is usually up to four capital letters followed by digits. My Casio for instance takes photos with a CMG1304.jpg file name. it will display Panasonic photos with a P1001241.jpg file name. It will NOT display a photo with a Zoe & Miriah.jpg file name. This seems to be true for all of my digital cameras.
I have read that with some cameras you can't strip the EXIF. This isn't true for any of my current cameras.
I always put the photos I want on the card back in the folder where the camera stores the photos I take. My Casio has internal memory and is set up for having a permanent photo album, so I can display images from a special folder. For most cameras you would probably do best storing the images you want to view in the sub-folder where the camera puts the pictures.