Home Ā» Goodbye to free photos on Google Photos: above 15 Gb you will have to pay

Goodbye to free photos on Google Photos: above 15 Gb you will have to pay

by admin

The farewell to unlimited free space for photos and videos was announced in November. Now we get to the heart: from 1st June who will exceed 15 Gb of content saved on Google Photos, one of the most used and appreciated services in the Big G ecosystem, will have to pay. Don’t worry: everything that has already been uploaded will not contribute to reaching the limit, so there is no need to download and delete photos from the weekend in Paris or those from recent birthdays. The 15 Gb threshold will be counted starting from content saved on the “cloud storage” service, that is, of remote storage, right from June. In practice, uploading files will consume the basic free storage space granted by Google for each account. Which are precisely 15 Gb.

Mountain View had explained it: impossible to support this totally free service, born in 2015, with such high amounts of data in the long run. Although, to be honest, the vast majority of people will not have to worry about a long time: according to the analysis of Big G, 80% of those who use Photos have at least 3 years of tranquility in front of them. In the sense that on average, at the rate to which he has uploaded clips in Full HD over the years and high quality shots at a maximum resolution of 16 Mp, will reach the 15 Gb ceiling around 2024. Obviously it also depends on how the other services of your account that rely on that free space, from Drive to Gmail with its attachments, will affect the total budget.

See also  San Giacomo discontent gym

Google challenges Zoom and makes Meet video conferences free for everyone


How much will we spend from June onwards
When that threshold were reached, the figure will still remain reasonable: the payment plans of Google One (as the entire cloud services platform of the American giant was renamed some time ago) start at the moment. from 1.99 euros per month for 100 Gb to go up to ā‚¬ 49.99 for 10 Tb, useful only for high-level professional realities. In between, there is the offer from 2.99 euros for 200 Gb which seems the most convenient for those who work with the mail, upload photos regularly and also take full advantage of the Drive space. Not to mention that there is time until June 1st to move, without costs and without limits, your entire photo library on Google Photos.

It must be said that Google Photos is also appreciated because it is a service versatile ed efficient: the photos are organized automatically and can be easily searched starting from keywords, places or other parameters; the backup it is possible from any device; there are integrated editing and photo editing tools, as well as sharing tools, and you can use third-party applications to make albums, print them and much more.

Google buys Timeful to organize our lives

by ELIS VIETTONE



Competitive cloud services
One of the alternatives, which is free but in reality you pay (it is included in the Prime subscription), is that of Amazon: it allows unlimited storage of high-resolution photos with 5 Gb of space Amazon Drive where, if desired, you can also ā€œparkā€ the videos. But we need the 36 euros per year of the subscription to the e-commerce giant, with which we ensure a large number of other services, on all free deliveries of millions of products in one day.

See also  Covid vaccination not contraindicated in pregnancy - Medicine

If you don’t have many photos, too Dropbox it may make sense, although the free threshold is limited to 2 Gb. Then there are the free 5 GB of iCloud by Apple, reserved for owners of Apple devices, but in reality also open to those who use Windows through a dedicated desktop app. Same free capacity for Microsoft OneDrive, which like iCloud then offers more space by paying different figures, and iDrive.

A thousand free photos can also be uploaded to Flickr, on the Swiss pCloud platform (10 Gb free with preview for raw files and various other features that make it a complete platform) and on Mega from the infamous Kim Dotcom (the Finnish naturalized German entrepreneur Kim Schmitz), who offers 50 GB free for everyone, even with a high level of encryption.

.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Privacy & Cookies Policy