Photos on the Mac is light years ahead of Google’s web interface for managing photos on the desktop. I can make custom albums based on EXIF data and easily export photos out (drag and drop) if I. A tutorial that shows you how to copy photos from the Photos app on Mac to Google Photos on the web. ~Gear I use~ Camera I use: New favorite lens for it: Other great lens: ^But you need this adapter: BEST affordable lens: Microphone I use: Mic stand/boom pole: Lighting Kit: Awesome portable audio recorder: Visit us at iDownloadBlog.com for more Apple news and videos! Download the free iDB app for the latest news! TWITTER: FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: TWITTER: BUSINESS INQUIRIES: [email protected] SUBSCRIBE! WATCH MY MOST POPULAR VIDEOS!: About iDB iDownloadBlog (iDB) was founded in May 2008 as a weblog focused on delivering Apple news, reviews, editorials as well as guides and tutorials about the iPhone, iPad, everything iOS, and Mac. IDB has evolved over the years to cover more content including HomeKit (or other smart home technologies), Apple TV, Apple Watch, and other leading trends in the tech industry. The site is updated multiple times daily by several editors and writers working from around the world. Mac tip: Move pictures from Mac Photos to Google Photos iDB. Last week at the Google I/O developer conference, Google announced to its Google Photos service. Since Google Photos runs on iOS and in any web browser, it’s a serious photo-storage option for Mac, iPhone, and iPad users—and in many ways, it’s way ahead of Apple’s Photos apps and iCloud Photo Library service. Then again, WWDC—Apple’s own developer conference—is in just two weeks. It’s an opportunity for Apple to declare where it’s taking Photos and iCloud Photo Library next. In the meantime, though, it’s worth pointing out where Google Photos is beating Apple’s offerings, and where Apple’s ahead—and how WWDC could be poised to change both sides of the equation. Apple’s advantages Apple I’ve spent an awful lot of time with Photos and iCloud Photo Library. You could say that. Spending that much time up close with any product makes you appreciate its features and deeply understand its flaws. Photos and iCloud Photo Library seem to be knocked reflexively by Internet commentators and critics alike, which is unfortunate—it’s actually a pretty impressive collection of features that work quite well. Keep in mind that iCloud Photo Library and the overhauled Photos app for Mac are only a couple of years old, and that the machine-learning features that allow Photos to let you search for all your photos of cats or zebras was only introduced last fall. These are, in some ways, Apple’s baby steps with a new product. Apple’s Photo offering has a few big advantages over Google Photos. If you’re a Mac user who prefers native apps to web apps, for example, Apple has a huge advantage—Photos is a real Mac application, while Google Photos runs entirely inside your web browser. There’s also the matter of security. With Google Photos, your entire photo library is available on Google’s servers, to be processed and analyzed in whatever way Google sees fit. In contrast, images in iCloud Photo Library are encrypted and Apple can’t see them when they’re off your device. There are a lot of advantages to Google’s approach, which I’ll get to shortly, but if you’re someone who feels uneasy about giving Google access to your personal data, Google’s approach will be a huge turn-off.
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