![]() ![]() But that’s not free like Flickr Apple charges you $240 a year for that terabyte. ![]() This, by the way, is also the idea behind Apple’s new iCloud Photo Library. (Alas, the uploader doesn’t yet auto-upload the photos in Adobe Lightroom.) The big idea, of course, is to consolidate all your pictures - your entire life’s worth - in a single place online, where it’s safe and easily searchable. Because if you asked 100 people what one item they’d rush into their burning homes to rescue, most would say, “My pictures and videos.” I’d be willing to bet that as you read this very sentence, you don’t have a complete, totally current backup of every picture and video on your phone, tablet, and computer(s). If disaster struck, and your computer died, you could restore your precious full-resolution photos - by downloading them one at a time. You had to manually upload every new batch of photos. You can still post your photos, tag, name, edit, slideshow, and organize them order printed stuff search the photos of the other 99,999,999 members and discuss them (the photos, not the members).īut despite the terabyte of storage, Flickr was never much good as a backup system. ![]() (Not to make any kind of judgment here, but a mathematician might note that Flickr therefore gives you 67 times as much free space as Microsoft OneDrive, 200 times as much free storage as Apple’s iCloud, and 500 times as much as or Dropbox. By the way, Google Photos also offers an auto-uploading program for your computer-but it’s limited to 15 gigabytes on the free plan.) You still get 1 terabyte of free storage for your photos and videos - that’s around 500,000 photos, or enough for your first child’s first three birthday parties. 1: Universal 1-terabyte autobackupįlickr’s design is mostly unchanged, and no features are going away. ![]()
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