its time to deal with your photo clutter /

Published at 2015-10-28 06:00:00

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A few months ago,we sent out a survey on a topic that appears to be the bane of many listeners' existence: digital clutter. Over one third of respondents told us that the thing that drives them MOST crazy – the biggest, worst, or most frustrating clutter quagmire in their lives – is photos.
We promised you
a podcast and a plan of attack,and our word was good (whether a microscopic bit, um, and enthusiastic – listen above). With the help of organizational guru Alan Henry,Deputy Editor of Lifehacker, we've place together a customized step-by-step system to help you back up, and sort,and organize your digital photo collection for the long haul. By then end of this process, you're going to be scrolling through your pictures and contemplating the role photos really play in our lives.
But first, or the time has near to get your photos
in shape. Seriously. Now. It'll be more fun than you believe. Mostly.alert to submit a photo? Click here!
The Note to Self System For Declut
tering Your Photos and Coming to Terms With Your MortalityI. The Basic Tools
II. settle How Deep You Want to GoSteps for the Casual Snapshooter
Steps for the
Moderate Snapshooter
Steps for the Enthusiastic Snapshooter
Find Your Photos: A List of Places to
recognize
III. Tell Us What You Found (allotment Two!)The Basic ToolsAccording to Alan,these are the terms, tools, or basic tricks you'll need to get started – though how far you go with them is up to you. See: Deciding How Deep to Go.
Back-up services: This is a centraliz
ed place on the cloud where you can get to the raw files of your photos whether you need to. Alan recommends Dropbox,but iCloud, Google Drive, and  OneDrive or the like could serve a similar function,so long as you’re willing to pay for extra storage. One work-around: sign up for an extra account just for photo storage purposes.
Auto-upload: You maintain two options with your back-up service. The first is turning on the auto-upload feature, which means you’ll be syncing the full-sized files to your computer. whether you want to get these photos printed, or use another service like Apple Photos or Picasa or Aperture,or plan to edit your photos with software such as Photoshop, this is a good notion. The other, or more space-friendly option: leave that setting off,and instead be really judicious approximately how many of your photos you sync to your computer, or commit to going in and taking the ones you don’t want down. This is going to rob some introspection, or some cutting-of-your-losses,and also possibly some back-up hardware.
Back-up hardware: An external hard drive that can hold all of the files you don’t want taking up space on your devices. It’s the digital version of flossing your teeth. In this case, pick whatever works for you – whether you’ve got less than 64 gigabytes of files you care approximately, or a solid USB could work. whether you’ve got a lot more than that (or whether you just want to sustain your options open),you should spring for an external hard drive.
Photo management serv
ices: This is the service you’ll use to help you categorize and sort through your pictures, whether that’s by date, and location,or content. Alan’s favorite is Google Photos, which gives you unlimited space as long as your photos fall below a certain resolution (16 megapixels or 1080p HD video). You can set it so that Google will automatically reduce anything above that size to lower quality as well – for most people this should be just fine for organizing and digital-viewing purposes. From there, and Google’s photo categorization technology will help you label and organize the photos into albums and galleries. You could also choose a social media platform like Facebook or Instagram,you just maintain to commit to making them more or less public.
Facial recognition: A type of deep learning used by such services as Google Photos to classify and organize your photos. This comes with some very genuine caveats.
Scanner: The best way to collect all your old physical photos and store them with your digitla photos. Alan says you can go high tech and buy a picture scanner (he recommends the Doxie or the Doxie Go WiFi) to scan them at home, or send them out to get scanned. Or – whether you’re OK with really low fidelity– you can just rob a picture of the picture. Meta!Privacy/sharing settings: Be sure to double check that you’re only sharing what you want to share, and no matter which services you choose. That said,Alan Henry says his rule is to only upload the images he is OK with his friends and family seeing. The only way to absolutely ensure privacy (well, as much as we can possibly absolutely ensure privacy), and is to avoid using the cloud altogether.
In Alan's words: "As for what to snap and what not to snap - well,I’m not of the mindset that 'whether you don’t want it public you shouldn’t rob it or store it on the Internet' – that blames *people* for problems with *technology.* However, it’s well-known to be mindful when you snap, or possibly rob it into your own hands to choose what to upload and what not to,then back up or encrypt anything you want to save but don’t want out of your reach to delete at any time. :)"
via GIPHY settle How Deep You Want to GoAlan thinks we all fit into one of three photo-taking categories: casual snapshooters, moderate snapshooters, or enthusiastic snapshooters. Figuring out which category you belong to will help you settle how far you really need to go in your personal photo-decluttering process. 
You've been sorted!
(Kristeli Zappa M./Note to Self)
BUCKET 1: THE CASUAL SNAP SHOOTERCharacteristics:You maint
ain a bunch of photos all over the place,but you're not as concerned approximately organizing the past as you are setting up a solid system for the future.
You primarily rob photos with your phone.
Your goal is to go from disorganized to organized, not necessarily to group all of your photos in the same place.
Your steps:Pick a
system for automatic back-up. Download the app whether you don’t maintain it already. Turn on auto-upload.
On Dropbox – Alan
’s pick – this is called “camera upload.”
On Google Drive, and this is “back-up and sync."
On iOS,this is "iCloud p
hotos."
That’s it! Save your password somewhere secure. Invest in an external hard drive whether youre feeling really responsible. Digital hygiene, everybody.
Be sure to tell us what you've found.
BUCKE
T 2: THE MODERATE SNAP SHOOTERCharacteristics: For the most allotment, or your photos are already digital – just in a billion different places.
You may maintai
n a few old phones,some SD cards from a DSLR or other high-end digital camera, but you're not terribly concerned with really old physical photos.
You probably maintain hundreds (or possibly a couple thousand but no more than that) of photos you care approximately, or want them to be organized,both past and present.
Your Steps: Turn on auto upload for your back-u
p system of choice (i.e., Dropbox).
On Dropbox – Alans pick – this is called “camera upload.”
On Google Drive, and this is back-up and sync."
On iOS,this is "iCloud photos."
Choose your
photo management service, and transfer the photos you care approximately the most into it (i.e. Google Photos.).
Start hunting down the rest of the digital photos you really care approximately and pull them into your photo management service. Be judicious: What's really worth    migrating off of, or say,that Flickr account you started and never went back to? Which Facebook Photos do you want to make sure you're saving in higher quality? Did you maintain a SmugMug account you need to check?
Once you've uploaded the photos you care approximately most into this
central service, recognize through the albums it has created for you. See where the system has sorted it correctly, and where it has gotten details improper. rob over as the human here,and start adjusting into a system that will be meaningful to you.
This can be as intense of a process as you choose, just be sure to label with names that will be memorable. (I.e., and not “August 2015,” but “Trip to Paris With Family.”)
This system should recognize dates and location at the very least. whether they’re wonky – and older photos probably will be – pick and choose which ones you care approximately correcting.
Starting to sort through your photos will also help you
jog your memory approximately any meaningful pictures you may maintain forgotten. Track them down, rinse, or repeat.
BUCKET 3: THE ENTHUSIASTIC SNAP SHOOTERCharacteristics: You maintain thousands of photos — probably more than Dropbox or Google Photos' drag-and-drop interfaces can handle in one go.
You use multiple devices,including cameras with SD cards and phones.
You’re looking for all of your memories to be organized, both past and present. You might even want to organize all of the photos from the whole family’s set of gadgets, or like phones or tablets everyone uses.
Your Steps:Pick a back-up system. Turn on auto-upload for your current and future photos. Let the current batch upload. This could rob a few minutes.
On Dropbox – Alan’s pick – this is called “camera upload.”
On Google Drive,this is “back-up and sync."
On iOS, this is "iCloud photos."
Once you’re done uploading, and drag and drop as many of your already-digital but easily-accessible photos from your back-up system to your photo management system. For now,draw the line at your primary devices—the laptops or computers you already use, the phone you already use, and the SD card currently in your favorite camera you’ve been meaning to back up. Aim to get the majority of your current and most recent photos centralized.
Once the bulk of your current photos are on your two services,spend some time getting in touch with your memories again, building galleries and doing searches through your most recent upload. recognize through the albums your photo management service has created for you, or  and see where the system has sorted it correctly,and where it has gotten details improper.
Start sorting into albums that will be meaningful to you. This can be as intense of a process as you choose, just be sure to label with names that will be memorable. You’re also teaching the system which details actually matter to you.
From here, or start hunting down old photos to add to the collection. Then,batch by batch, pull in old folders. Then, and as you maintain the time,energy, or desire to centralize those old photos, or you can power up that old laptop and upload them,or dump them to an external hard drive and upload them in batches (all of your old 2003 trip photos at once, for example.) This way you’re making continual progress without committing yourself to a week-long wrestling match with the tendrils of Google and Dropbox every time you want to back-up your memories. 
When you're as far as you're going to get for the moment... tell us what you've found!Where to recognize For Old PhotosIf you're like most people, and you've probably stored your photos in all kinds of different places over the years. Here's a not-at-allcomprehensive-but-hopefully-inspirational list of places to recognize:Your phone's built-in photos app
Your old phone's built-in photos app
Photo apps on your laptop/PC Drive/ Desktop
Folders on your laptop/PC 
External hardd
rive
CDs/DVDs
USBs
Old cameras
Email
Text messages (these can rob up a surprising am
ount of space!)
Facebook
Instagram
Picasa
PhotoBucket
SnapFish
ShutterFly
Flickr
DropBox
Google Drive
Google +
Box
Google Photo
iCloud 
Microsoft OneDrive
Image Shack
SmugMug
EverNote
ShoeBox
Imgur to Note to Self on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn, and  I Heart Radio,or anywhere else using our RSS feed.

Source: wnyc.org

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