
The mobile app also has a function that automatically backs up all photos taken with your smartphone.įree storage space: 7 free image uploads/week, unlimited uploads for subscribers

You can use special apps for PC, iOS, Android and Kindle Fire to upload and view images. Instead of overloading the service with various add-ons, Amazon allows you to connect your library to a third-party app that gives you the opportunity to edit and print photographs as well as create photo products. When creating Prime Photos, the developers decided to avoid including excessive functions, which is why this service takes the first place on our list of photo websites in terms of ease of use. Photographs published on Cloud Drive can be shared via email, on Facebook or downloaded to your PC or smartphone. Uploaded images can be organized into albums that Amazon sorts chronologically by default. This service is a part of the Amazon Cloud Drive storage. Prime Photos is included an Amazon Prime subscription and gives you 5GB of space for videos and documents (not photographs!). Price: 5GB for videos ($119 Prime subscription) plus a couple more.Free storage space: Unlimited for photographs

As far as the community aspect, I'm fine with sharing my images on forums such as MR, NikonCafe, Cameraderie, etc.

I have used pBase, Smugmug and Zenfolio for galleries of my images and I'm happy with sticking with Zenfolio at the present time.

Whatever.Īs for Flickr, I tried it out years ago as a free thingy but didn't care for it and never got involved in the "community" aspect of it nor did I pay to use it. I remember Instagram's start, and it was all about photos and the fun one could have with filters and such with one's iPhone and sharing the results.then it shifted to a bit more serious approach and that was fine, too, with photographers sharing their work that they'd shot with "real" cameras, and some of them eventually shifting to using the site as a sort of marketing tool, or as Molly suggests, a way of connecting with other photographers, but now, this moving towards video seems as though Instagram is trying to attract the Tik-Tok crowd. Lately I've noticed this trend towards sharing videos (not just those annoying little "stories" which disappear after 24 hours and are easy to miss) but something else.I think they're called "reels"? I have an Instagram account but don't put my own images up on there, just mainly am there because of keeping up with a few friends' accounts and such. Click to expand.Haven't read the article yet, but the reference to video catches my eye.
