

To turn on Amazon Photos Autosave on an Android, follow these steps. How to Turn On Amazon Photos Autosave on an Android Note that you must open the Amazon Photos app for the photos and videos to be autosaved. If you want to use cellular data to autosave your file, turn on the toggle switch to “Auto-save using cellular data.” You can also turn the toggle switch for the “Save Videos” option to allow videos to be automatically saved whenever you’re connected to the internet.īy default, your photos and videos will be autosaved if you’re connected to a Wi-Fi connection.Turn on the toggle switch for the “Save Photos” option.Go to “Settings” icon in the top-right corner of the screen.Tap the smiley icon in the top-left corner of the screen.So perhaps if I can hand off some of my raw files to the cloud, then maybe I don't need to keep them locally.How to Turn On Amazon Photos Autosave on an iPhoneįollow these steps to turn on Amazon Photos autosave on an iPhone. But I like doing it, and the jpg gives me a simple, easy to view image, while the Nikon raw file gives me something I can work with and tweak light levels and generally make better images. It's just not practical to keep a high-resolution jpg and a raw file of the same image. Long term, I won't be able to carry on storing raw images forever. In fact, I totted my total image library up and got to 1TB so far.

A few albums of photos and you're talking about many, many gigabytes. My SLR produces jpegs of more than 10mb, and the raw counterparts are as much as 50mb. If you're a photographer though, the really great news is that Amazon allows you to store both jpegs and raw files. Here's how it works - if you have Prime Photos with your Prime subscription, or you've paid the yearly fee (it's only $12 for just photos, by the way, a bargain for unlimited storage) then you can simply upload as many images to your drive as you like and they won't count against your storage allowance.
