Free Downloads I Lived (2015)

Free Downloads I Lived (2015) Rating: 5,0/5 2297votes

All- time greatest album. The best way to manage your photos online in 2. By Casey Newton. In August 2. Nearly two years later, much has changed. Everpix, our pick for average users, went out of business. Picturelife, our choice for power users, sold itself to Stream.

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Nation. And Google+ remains a worthy free choice, even if Google’s plans for photos are very much up in the air. In the meantime, the pace of innovation has slowed to a crawl.

Giants like Apple and Amazon have improved their services and lowered prices. But they’ve barely invested anything in resurfacing old photos, or helping you enjoy them. Danny Collins (2015) Ipod Movie. It’s fair to question whether photo storage even makes sense as a dedicated service in 2. Photos are some of the most important files you’ll ever create. The thing is, photos are some of the most important files you’ll ever create. We’re taking more photos than ever — an estimated 9. And billions more live on our camera rolls, waiting for us to back them up, erase them, or — amazingly — simply discard them when we give up and buy a new phone.

I’m losing count of the people who tell me that they can’t take any more photos because their smartphones are out of storage space. And yet I can’t fault them — every time I start explaining an . Because auto- uploading features are now standard, I can be confident that whenever I snap a photo, it’s quickly backed up to the cloud. Because photos are a uniquely visual file format, good services have designed apps that are fun to browse and easy to search.

Most importantly, they allow me to stop using my phone’s camera roll as a default back- up solution, letting me delete photos as needed to free up space. So which service should you pick? We’ve winnowed out our list of services to consider to a manageable eight, looking for a storage system that best balances power, ease of use, and value. Completists will also want to check out indies like Everalbum, Joomeo, and Shoebox, but my experience with short- lived predecessors like Everpix and Loom has made me wary of recommending them to the masses.

As for the more established Adobe Revel — it’s an aggressively meh product and didn’t make the cut. Amazon is a newcomer to the online photo game, having introduced free, unlimited picture storage as part of Amazon Prime in November. There’s i. Cloud Photo Stream, where you can store your last 1,0. And then there’s the i. Cloud Photo Library, which syncs your i. OS devices to Apple’s new Photos app for Mac.

If you’re a committed Apple user, Photo Library is a good, reasonably cheap option starting at a buck a month for 2. GB of storage. You can also tweak the settings to store lower- resolution copies of your photos on your phone to free up storage — something that would help a lot of people. The downside to Apple’s photo solution, as with Amazon’s, is how cloistered it feels: there’s no easy way to import your photos from social networks. Dropbox’s entry into full- featured photo storage is Carousel, an app for backing up your photos automatically and displaying them in a zippy little timeline you scroll with your thumb. Carousel hasn’t gotten much traction — it has fewer than 5 million downloads on Android — but it works fine, and if you’re backing up your photos to Dropbox already, it’s a good tool for browsing them.

Carousel also has my favorite sharing tool of these apps: it organizes your shared photos into conversations based on the people you’re sharing with, in a kind of hybrid of i. Message and Apple’s shared photo streams. Download Entertainment (2015) Movie Now. But it only works as intended if everyone has Carousel installed, and the download charts would suggest that’s not the case.

Dropbox’s other big, consumer- friendly move in the past two years has been to lower its prices dramatically: 1 TB of storage for $1. It’s still not the cheapest option, but it’s a much better value than it’s been in the past. And Dropbox’s file storage and syncing are still best in class. Two years ago, Flickr appeared to be making a comeback. Fresh off a redesign and an offer of 1 TB in free storage, Yahoo’s venerable photo solution had fresh appeal for both amateur and serious photographers.

Since then, progress has slowed to a crawl. Its mobile app never quite evolved into the Instagram competitor that Yahoo was clearly aiming for, and Flickr. It’s also ugly: most photos shared by my friends there are in the popular square format, but Flickr is designed for full- bleed images — and so it puts ugly black bars on either side of every photo, giving the entire page a letterboxed effect. Flickr still does plenty of things right, and longtime users can be reasonably confident their pictures are safe there. But it’s giving new users fewer and fewer reasons to check it out. Now we’re getting somewhere.

It’s buried inside Google’s all- but- abandoned social network, but Google’s take on photos is still easy to recommend. It offers you unlimited free uploads at a size of 2. GIFs, and automatically creating slick vacation photo albums whenever you spend a few days away from home. By default Google shows you highlights of your photos rather than your entire timeline, giving you a pleasing high- level view of your collection. And its web- based editing tools are superb.

Because it comes from a selfish internet giant, Google+ won’t let you import from your other social networks. But for easily backing up all the photos you’re taking on your phone, Google+ is easy and often even fun. Microsoft’s total storage solution was called Sky. Drive last time we checked in.

Now it’s One. Drive, and it’s much more generous: 3. GB of free storage, as long as you enable auto- upload on the mobile app. Like many services built to store all your files rather than just photos, One. Drive’s approach to photos is fairly basic. Its most intriguing feature is tags: it uses machine vision to group your photos automatically in a wild variety of categories. Photos just don’t seem to be One.

Drive’s top priority. Picturelife’s independence from a big platform like Apple or Google makes it a more democratic solution than the giants’. With a few clicks, you can connect it with Flickr, Foursquare, Google, Instagram, Tumblr, and Twitter, among other networks, ensuring that everything you share to social media gets backed up to a single place. Picturelife also gives you a daily dose of nostalgia pushed to your mobile devices, telling you what you were up to on that day in previous years. Overall, the service does a superior job in creating a single online home for your photos, and organizes them into a nice- enough interface with lots of options for browsing and sharing. There’s a wrinkle with Picturelife, though: it has a new owner.

In February, the original founder sold the business to digital media hub Stream. Nation, and most of its employees left. Stream. Nation founder Jonathan Benassaya has indicated the services will merge over time, letting users store a wider variety of personal media for one price. It remains to be seen whether Picturelife’s unique appeal will survive the transition. Now 1. 3 years old, Smug. Mug has remained independent by embracing a positively quaint strategy: charging its users for storage, even at the lowest levels. After a two- week trial, you’ll have to pay to use the service, starting at $6.

It also has the most options for turning your photos into merchandise and putting them up for sale. Smug. Mug isn’t for most people, but it’s a solid offering for professionals and anyone else who owns a fancy camera. The score. Since the last time we checked, thanks to features like auto- upload, these services have roughly achieved feature parity. Annoyingly, though, the features usually only work when the apps are running in the background, so you have to open them every few weeks while you’re on Wi- Fi and let them do their work.

There are still differences in the services at the edges, though, notably around which services will import your photos from social networks. It’s arguably less important than ever which service you pick.