Posted on 07/02/2023 11:52:31 AM PDT by nickcarraway
Apple announced it will permanently do away with the My Photo Stream album next month. The feature automatically stores pictures taken in the last 30 days.
Due to the impending shutdown, My Photo Stream stopped uploading snaps on June 26 — and everything in the album will be deleted when the service ceases July 26.
However, any pics that were uploaded to My Photo Stream before June 26 will remain in iCloud for 30 days from the date of upload and will be available on devices where My Photo Stream is enabled. To ensure you do not lose any pictures, go into the My Photo Stream album in your camera roll and save your pictures to your device or to iCloud.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Actually I do have an Apple ID.
Ok. I logged in and the photos from my computer were there. But not my phone…which actually are more important to be honest. Thank you.
Great!
On another note, I was a bit upset when I got my card, and found out I couldn't make a payment from my bank's bill pay system. I'd never used my cell phone to do bank transactions and didn't want to start. But since I got the card in order to use it to buy a new Mac, I had no choice. I had to call support in order to get help to do it. It's the only bill I have that I pay on my cell phone. I use my computer to access my bank account, and schedule payments through them.
I have all my devices (iPhone, iPad) syncing photos to iCloud. I can view all of them on any device (including MacBook Pro).
Your phone should be syncing to iCloud. I have sporadic problems with synchronization. The first step is to make sure you have the latest OS version on each device. Then log out of iCloud on each device and log back in. Make sure you are using the same Apple ID on each device, too.
Thank you. I’ll try that. I appreciate this a lot.
Never save your stuff on somebody else’s storage. Ever.
Very sound advice, I have pictures as well as tons of files dating all he way back to the early days of computers over thirty years all kept on auxiliary hard drives. As hard drives became better and more reliable I kept up dating and transferring the contents. I never would trust any outside source for keeping my files, pictures as well as financial info safe and secure and so far it had served me very well.
For years, I kept all my photos on hard drives inside my house. I had three large drives and would rotate them. I always hated having to plug them in and run the backup software.
I then tried using an Apple Network Attached Drive (their “Time Capsule”) with the Apple “Time Machine” software. It worked pretty good and quietly backed up my computer to my personal cloud in my house. But the Time Capsules were notoriously unreliable and Apple discontinued it.
I tried backing up to my home Synology NAS, but that didn’t work very well, either.
So I went with Apple’s iCloud. Apple takes security a lot more seriously (IMO) than Amazon and Google and is a lot more trustworthy. But my photos are in their cloud and subject to loss. I sometimes move all the photos down to my local storage, but I’ve gotten lax about that. But overall, I love the convenience of iCloud and the seamlessness between my phone, tablet and laptop. A pic snapped my phone is in the cloud in seconds (usually).
Of course, my first few thousand photographs were on Kodachrome and Ektachrome starting in 1973 and I’ve still got those slide. They are all digitized, too.
That is the way I store. Important stuff gets saved on two separate physical devices.
I had the same situation, starting in 1972. Then I took a hard-line approach and just tossed anything I hadn't viewed recently. I figured that if I wasn't interested in that stuff, who would?
I will never trust those corporate entities for any reason.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.