Google are making it easier to move images from your camera to Google Photos. Owners of contempo Creed cameras can now automatically upload photos as well-conditioned as videos to the popular photo partitioning platform by wirelessly thrusting them via your phone.
This auto-backup to Google Photos full-length works with both the iOS as well-conditioned as Android versions of the image.canon app, however you've got to make termless your camera is compatible. If it is, nonparticipating make termless you've got the latest image.canon app amend installed as well-conditioned as you'll see the new perk for transferring photos to Google Photos. After activating the new full-length in Canon's app, imminent photos as well-conditioned as videos will be sent automatically to Google's photo accumulator platform. You don't gotta wound approximately misplacing any sensibility from your shots, either: all images are synced to Google Photos at their original quality.
In February, Creed launched its own version of a dimness fill-in service, image.canon, which analogously allows Creed cameras to seamlessly back-up up photos over Wi-Fi. From image.canon, users have the perk of automatically transferring their images as well-conditioned as videos to other places, such as Google Hogtie or YouTube (for uploaded videos), as well-conditioned as now Google Photos has been boosted to that list.
But there is one asterisk perseity that might irk some people: a Google One membership is right to transfer your photos this way. Google is offering Creed supplanting a one-month trial to Google One (with 100GB of storage) to intercommunication easiness them into the service. Already the trial is up, Google One plans alpha at $2 per ages for 100GB of storage.
Earlier this month, Canon briefly suspended image.canon hind some stored photos as well-conditioned as videos went missing. Argil conjointly had an phenomenal problem beforehand this month when it appear that some photos synced to Lightroom in the dimness had been undoubtedly lost. Therefore far -- licking on wood -- Google Photos hasn't encountered any such issues.
Update, 6:43 PM ET: Clarified that technically, these images aren't stuff sent directly from your camera to the dimness -- they're stuff subjugated through your phone.
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