Sunday, August 12, 2012

4 Ways to Safely Backup iPhone iPad Photos and Videos

4 Ways to Safely Backup iPhone iPad Photos and Videos

Method 1 – iTunes/iCloud

The easiest way to backup everything is to use iCloud or iTunes. Open iTunes, connect your device and then right-click on it and choose Backup:
backup iphone
This will manually backup your device to iTunes. Note that if you have iCloud backup turned on, you can still locally backup your device using this method. I highly recommend doing a backup in iTunes also as I’ve tried to restore an iCloud backup before and it didn’t work. iCloud is nice, but it doesn’t seem to be terribly reliable at this point.
To turn on iCloud backup, go to Settings on your device, tap iCloud and tap Storage and Backup.
Icloud backup
Turn it on and then either let the device backup on it’s own or you can manually perform a backup to iCloud if you don’t want to wait. Make sure your device is connected to a power source and WiFi before starting the backup.
The only thing about backing your devices up this way is that if you delete a single video, for example, and want to restore that, you have to do a complete restore of the device. Now it’s great if your device gets wiped completely, then you can restore the whole thing from backup and you’ll have all your photos and videos plus everything else.

Method 2 – iPhoto/Picasa

If you’re on a Mac, another good option is iPhoto. You can set it up so that whenever you connect your device to your Mac, it will automatically import all of the photos and videos. After the import, you can choose whether to keep them on the device or delete them.
iphoto
iPhoto is free for Mac and is also a good way to organize all your photos and videos. It’s basically Picasa for Mac. On Windows, you can use Picasa. I like Picasa more because if you have a Google account, you can import all your photos and videos from your iPhone/iPad and then upload them to your Google+ Photos account. With iPhoto, there is no link to iCloud except for Photostream, which I will mention later. It would be really nice if Apple came out with their own cloud backup that allowed video uploads.
picasa
The nice thing about Picasa is that it will also let you upload your videos, including the ones shot on any of your Apple devices. You can also then easily share the photos and videos using Picasa Web Albums. If you’re using iPhoto, then I suggest your turn on Time Machine on your Mac and make sure it’s backed up to some external drive. You don’t want the photos/videos just on your computer either.

Method 3 – Photostream

The only cloud option available from Apple is the Photostream, which will automatically upload and store the last 1,000 photos you have taken. Even though it gets rid of the photos after 30 days or after 1,000 photos, it’s still better than nothing. Also, if you have a Mac, then you can use iPhoto and enable the Photostream inside iPhoto.
iPhoto will download all the pictures from the stream, but it will also automatically create a monthly backup of all your Photostream pictures. So even if you delete all the photos off your device, as long as you open iPhoto a few times a month, it will save all the photos that were ever in the Photostream.
photostream

Method 4 – Dropbox/Google+

The last method and the one I use the most is to backup to Dropbox and/or Google+. You can download the Dropbox and Google+ iPhone and iPad apps and have your photos and vides automatically uploaded to either cloud service. It’s a great way to instantly backup any photos and videos you take on your device. Both apps will also upload any currently stored photos and videos too.
dropbox upload
On Dropbox, just tap on Camera Upload and enable it. It will then start uploading everything to the Camera Uploads folder in your Dropbox account. In Google+, tap the settings icon at the bottom and then tap on Instant Upload.