Thursday 4 June 2015

Google: Google Photos

The search giant’s appealing service for storing pictures and videos in the cloud. It was uncoupled from Google’s widely ignored social network, Google+, where it had been effectively hidden. And it was upgraded with new features.

Not only that, but Google gave Photos users free, unlimited storage for pictures and videos at the highest resolutions used by average smartphone owners. And it issued nearly identical versions of the shiny new standalone app across Android devices and Apple’s iPhones and iPads. There’s also a browser version for the Mac and Windows PCs.

Once you’ve backed up your photo library to the service, all your photos and videos, including any new ones you take, are synced among all of these devices.

Google Photos was always good, but now it’s entirely outside of a social network. Lots of folks choose to share photos on social networks, but few want to share every single one publicly, or even among all their friends and followers. Now you don’t need a Google+ account to use Google Photos, and your pictures and videos remain private unless and until you choose to share them, Google says.

And when you do want to share them, you can totally ignore Google+ and easily and quickly post them to Facebook, Twitter and other networks, on both Android and iOS. You can email a link to a photo to someone, which works whether or not he or she has the Google Photos app.

<< People, Places and Things >>
The coolest aspect of the new Google Photos is that once you click the search button — before you even type anything — the app presents you with groups of pictures organized by three categories: People, Places and Things.

In the People section, Google collects all the photos containing faces it thinks are the same, without any work by you. It doesn’t identify these people, but just collects them for you for quick access. I found its guesses remarkably accurate. It even picked out a tiny image of my wife in the background of a group shot.

In the Places section, Google relies on geo-tagging where available. For older photos taken with cameras that lacked location tracking, it relies on known landmarks. For instance, it correctly identified a photo of the Eiffel Tower at night that I took with a cheap camera in 2002.

But the Things section, while less accurate, is more impressive. Here, the app uses cloud computing power to aggregate shots of, say, flowers or cars or the sky or tall buildings or food or concerts, graduations, birthdays — and yes, cats. And there are many more categories, including screenshots, posters and castles.

I was impressed by most of Google’s choices in the Things section. For instance, a category called Boats correctly included everything from fishing boats off Cape Cod to gondolas in Venice.

But there were some errors. For example, under Screenshots, Google Photos included an original, professionally-taken photo of me interviewing the company’s own top executive, Sundar Pichai — and it wasn’t a screenshot. And under the category Sky it included a graphic for an event by archrival Apple, which wouldn’t qualify as a Sky scene except on a planet where the sky was greenish and the sun was in the shape of the Apple logo.

You can remove such classification errors manually.

<< Photo Effects >>
As before, Google Photos automatically creates collages, animations, photo groups, panoramas and “stories” from photos it detects as being from the same place and time. You can choose whether to keep these in your library. As in the past, I generally found these pleasing and accurate. For instance, for my library, it created a Story — a sort of digital photo book — for a recent trip I took to China and Hong Kong, complete with maps showing my route.

The new version includes an “Assistant” panel that shows how your backup is going and presents these auto-created collections so you can choose whether you want to keep them.

You can also now manually create collages, animations, stories and more. And there are lightweight editing tools, including filters.

<< Search >>
Not surprisingly, search is a central feature in Google Photos, easily accessible from a blue button at the lower right of the screen. When I typed in “Massachusetts,” Google Photos instantly brought up loads of photos of subjects, ranging from my baby granddaughter (who lives there) to Revolutionary War sites I’d visited there to games I had attended at glorious Fenway Park in Boston.

<< Navigation >>
When you want to select multiple pictures — say, for sharing or creating an album — you don’t have to tap on them one by one. You can just select the first one and then slide your finger to add others to the selection.

Also, you can pinch and zoom to switch the view of your photo library from years to months to days.

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