![]() Google is a giant and is much more likely to exist in a few decades than a small cloud backup service, or even Dropbox.īut of course, there are trust issues with Google, or with anything free really, so you pay a certain price for free Google Photos. The offer from Google Photos – unlimited photo and video backups for life – makes it an attractive option if you understand the terms and limitations. And what if Dropbox ceases to be around in 20 or more years, or gets bought out? What happens to your photo backups then? Google Photos Backup For 10 years of simply storing your old photos, you’re paying $1200. (Yes, there’s a free option but it caps at 2GB, which is not enough for backing up photos.) Plus, it integrates directly with your Mac or PC to automatically backup and sync new photos. Dropbox starts at $10/month for 1 TB of storage. Or you can shill out a monthly fee to Dropbox or one of the other cloud-based photo backup services, and let someone else worry about maintaining your photo backups. That means one drive at a friend or family member’s house, another in safe, fire-proof storage, and one buried near the tree out back. Or you could take on the video editor’s rule of keeping your important data on 3 different drives in separate locations. Old, spinning drives at least have some physical burn of your photo data, so you may have better luck for long term backup with something like the WD MyBook (which we’ve used for years). Trust us, we’ve amassed a lot of media over the years, and our older SSD drives and USB sticks are already starting to ghost If gone unused for a couple years, flash memory has a tendency to simply disappear on you – poof, ghosting where there used to be data. ![]() But you can’t depend on USB sticks and SSD drives. Some services are missing, but quite a few popular ones are still available.If you’re like most people, the relief of unlimited digital photos has taken on a whole new type of anxiety: what to do with all your photos?īacking your thousands upon thousands of photos – and probably videos too – feels like a growing pressure as your phone and memory cards get filled up. In closing, the application allows you to easily manage your online backups of photos and videos. Just select the accounts that you want to synchronize and with a click of a button the process is started. PicBackMan is able to do the work for you in a fraction of the time. More often than not, manually moving or copying entire albums from one service to the other is not an easy task. Unfortunately, you can't select the name or location of the duplicate folder. You can choose to delete them straight away or move them to a dedicated folder, in order to make sure you are only permanently removing unwanted files. Your privacy is taken into account, so all the files are uploaded as private.Īnother useful feature is the scan for duplicate items that are using up precious space. Sadly, there is no support for other services, like Imgur, Imageshack or Vimeo, among others. With PicBackMan, you can safely transfer your pictures and clips to Flickr, Google Photos, Smugmug, OneDrive, Dropbox, Photobucket, Google Drive, Facebook, Box, Instagram, YouTube, Foursquare or your Amazon server. For users who are not sure what a certain icon represents, they can hover the mouse cursor over it and a tooltip displays the name. The services only show their respective logos, providing a clean and uncluttered interface. ![]() ![]() Each displays the social media and online storage services that they are compatible with, along with the total size and number of files that have been transferred so far. The utility's four main functions (photo backup, video backup, duplicate scanner and account migration) are separated in tabs for easy navigation. If you don't want to worry about losing your favorite photos and videos or want to automatically migrate your albums from one social media account to another, you could use a third-party software solution, like PicBackMan.
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