Troubleshooting iPhone Photography Issues: Comprehensive Fixes
Troubleshooting iPhone Photography Issues: Comprehensive Fixes
If you’re an iPhone or iPad camera shutterbug, you no doubt experience the frustration of managing and processing photos on and beyond your mobile device(s). In the release of iOS 5, Apple introduced Photo Stream as a possible solution to managing and sharing iOS camera photos between Apple mobile and computer devices.
Indeed, Photo Stream has been helpful, but there are a few major problems that Apple has yet to address. In this article I share the limitations of Photo Stream and the Camera Roll features for iOS, and how I’m trying to work around those issues.
Photo Stream and Camera Roll
As you probably know, when you shoot photos with the built-in iPhone or iPad camera, they are automatically saved to a Camera Roll in the Photo Library app.
However, when you go to add selected Camera Roll photos into albums, you run into a problem. Say you just shot a set of Easter Sunday or other holiday photos and you put them into an Photo Library album for quick access and management. The problem occurs however when you want to delete those photos from Camera Roll, but leave a copy of them in a designated album. You can’t do it. Photos deleted from the Camera Roll will also be deleted in other albums you add them to. (Note: they’re not really added/copied to an album, just referenced to it.)
If you’ve enabled Photo Stream on your mobile devices and iPhoto or Aperture, all your photos added to the Camera Roll will automatically be copied to Apple’s iCloud server where they will be shared with all your enabled devices, i.e. iPhoto on your Mac and the Photo Stream folders on your other iOS 5 mobile devices.
Photo Stream is supper great for instantly backing up and sharing your iOS photos. You can even access them on your Apple TV. And in the last iOS 5 update, you can now delete one or more photos from your Photo Stream. You just have to remember, however, that when you delete photos from Photo Stream on any of your devices, they get deleted on all your devices, since your photos in Photo Stream rest in the cloud and not on any actual local hard drive.
Again, Photo Stream works well in this regard. However, while you can share photos via email, text message, Twitter, etc., you can’t copy photos to separate albums on your iOS devices. You can do so, however, in iPhoto and Aperture. To have this done automatically, open the Preferences of these applications, and enable Automatic Import, of photos from Photo Stream. Photos will be copied into a separate album and labeled by the current month.
The Problem
So the biggest problem to me with managing photos on iOS device is the ability to copy photos to an album in your Photos Library and have those photos remain there, even if they are deleted from your Camera Roll and Photo Stream.
Being able to manage and keep photos into separate albums means not only can you can access them more easily, especially when you have hundreds of photos in your Camera Roll and Photo Stream, but it also means you can keep the original photos, and edit copies of them in say Instagram or other photo apps.
Solutions
Well, so far here are my solutions to the problems. First off I use Hedonic Software’s Albums: Photo and Video Manager ($2.99) app for maintaining the photos I want to keep on my iOS devices.
I use this app because it supports keywords and smart albums, similar to what is available in iPhoto and Aperture. I can easily tag imported photos and they automatically are placed in designated smart albums.
Secondly, the biggest problem with the Camera Roll is that even with iOS 5, Apple still has not made it possible to select all photos on the Camera Roll with one tap. You literally have to tap each one of them separately and then tap the Delete button at the bottom. But there is another option.
If you have hundreds of photos you need to delete from the Camera Roll, you can hook up your mobile camera device to your computer, and then open a built-in OS X application called Image Capture (in the Applications folder.) All your Camera Roll photos will show up in that application, and from there you can do a Command+A (Select All) and both import those photos onto your computer and delete from the Camera Roll on your device. Sadly, this can’t be done wirelessly.
I also use an app called CameraSync ($2.99) on my iPhone which will after being launched instantly uploads all my Camera Roll photos and videos to a designated folder in Dropbox (or SkyDrive, FTP server, Amazon S3 bucket, etc..) It will remember which image and video files it already uploaded so you don’t have to worry if particular files have been backed up. This app is very useful for people not using Photo Stream.
iPhone photography has changed the way I shoot and process photos, but until Apple rectifies the three major limitations discussed above, managing photos and videos on the device will remain a needlessly cumbersome process.
For other iPhone camera related articles, check out these:
10 Powerful & Useful iPhone Camera Apps To Help You Take Better Pictures
3 Tools For Managing Your Photos In Dropbox
6 Things You Need To Know About The Photos App In iOS 5
Let us know about your iPhone camera workflow. I’m hoping there are better solutions out there.
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- Title: Troubleshooting iPhone Photography Issues: Comprehensive Fixes
- Author: Edward
- Created at : 2024-11-02 22:00:46
- Updated at : 2024-11-04 19:27:29
- Link: https://fox-that.techidaily.com/troubleshooting-iphone-photography-issues-comprehensive-fixes/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.