Overview
Summary: In October of 2017, Google Photos is arguably the best choice for safekeeping photos for the casual smartphone or tablet photographer. It’s automatic, it’s cheap, possibly free, and it gives you the option of clearing stuff off your device while maintaining the backup.
Vocabulary:
copy – duplicate a file, usually saving the duplicate in a different place
move – place a file in a new place, deleting it from the old one
sync or synchronize – to make the files in one place the same as the files in another. May involve deletion as well as copying
upload – to copy files from a device to another device or to the cloud
back up – similar to upload – copy files from one device to another device or to the cloud. If you delete a photo from your device, it will still exist in the backup, until you take a NEW backup, which will not include your deleted items.
It’s a scary thing when those little computers we like to carry around tell us that they are all full and can no longer take new photos, or download new apps, or do other things we want them to do. Fortunately, it’s easier than ever to move things off our phones and put them somewhere else for safekeeping.
There are three major places people put their precious digital photos for safekeeping:
- The cloud
- Their laptop or desktop
- A stand alone backup drive
There are numerous variations on these procedures. I’m going to review a few of the most popular ones, but you can find lots of different ways by googling “How to move photos from ______ to ______”
Move Photos to The Cloud
Advantages
- Available from everywhere
- Available to all devices
- Professionally Managed
- Automatic upload is available
- If you are not picky about the quality stored, Google offers unlimited free space for iPad, iPhone and Android users!
Disadvantages
- Privacy is protected only by server security (someone could hack in and get your pix)
- If you have more than the free space can contain, you’ll need to pay a subscription fee
- The company could go out of business, and you’d lose everything that is on their servers if they didn’t give you time to move them. (This rarely happens — usually you get an email saying that you will need to move your stuff in the next month or so)
- iCloud weirdly will not let you delete things from your phone while keeping them on your device, or even on another iCloud enabled device. It’s best understood as a “sync” application and it imagines itself as the center of your world.
Examples
iCloud
iPad or iPhone to iCloud – video
Google Photos
Android or iPhone to Google – text
Back up to Google from desktop or phone – video
Dropbox
Upload files from a phone or tablet – text
Upload photos from an iPhone – video
Move Photos to Your Laptop or Desktop
Advantages
- Very private
- Inexpensive
- Available to good editing software
Disadvantages
- Hard disk death
- Not automatic — Must think to attach phone and initiate upload
- Must remember procedure
Examples
iPad to Mac or Windows computer
Back up iPad or iPhone to Mac or Windows computer – Video
Move Photos from iPad to Mac or Windows computer using Image Capture – Video
Android to Mac
Android to Mac – Video showing several helper apps
Android to Windows
Move Photos to a Stand-Alone Backup Drive – (not recommended)
Advantages
- Very Private
- Portable – plugs into just about any computer
- No subscription fee after you’ve bought the drive
Disadvantages
- Not automatic – Have to remember to do the migration
- Hard disk death happens here, too
- Easy to misplace the drive
- Procedures are way more complicated than they should be
- Likely requires an adapter to connect drive to phone/tablet
Examples
iPad to backup drive (ignore ad for wondershare)
Really, it seems to me that if you want your pix on a portable drive, it’s easiest to first move them to your computer, and then use your computer backup program to get them there. Phones and tablets just are not optimized to be attached to an external drive, and it takes a lot of futzing to make that connection work.
Deleting the stuff on your device
iCloud (note: this deletes photos in iCloud and on devices!)
Delete photos from iPad or iPhone – text
Deleting photos from your iphone – video
Google Photos (includes option to ONLY delete from device)
Delete Photos from Android device using google photos – text
Using Google Photos to Save Space on your iPhone – video
Migrating photos from Apple Photos to Google Photos
Gizmodo field guide to migrating from Apple Photo to Google Photo – text
Another article on how to migrate