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Upgrading your iOS device to a new operating system is, and long has been, a one-way trip.Īpple pays a lot of lip service to the customer experience. After all, you can't downgrade to iOS 7 once you've upgraded to iOS 8. Most people jumping on iOS 8 are just finding out about this now, after it's too late to do anything about it. The problem is that Apple hasn't done a great job - or any job, really - of communicating these changes to us, their customers. Forcing a change to Photos enables Apple to streamline its customers' digital photo workflow. It never played well with iCloud integration and syncing - those features were bolt-on and poorly integrated. In fairness to Apple, digital photography has changed a lot since iPhoto was developed, even iPhoto for iOS. This transition from iPhoto to Photos is the latest example of a recurring philosophy we see practiced by Apple: The company is willing to impose some short-term discomfort on customers to suit their long-term vision. There are some other gotchas, too, outlined at the Apple support note I linked above. What's more, iPhoto image adjustments made to photos synced from iTunes will be retained, after a fashion: A duplicate of each photo is made in Photos, with adjustments applied. Migrating your iPhoto library adds any photos that aren't already in Photos, and image adjustments made in iPhoto are included. Follow this path: iPhoto > Preferences > Advanced and then choose Never for Look Up Places.Apple has detailed the move in a support note (opens in new tab) posted to their web site. Lastly, if you are uncomfortable with adding geographical information in iPhoto to photos you take with a GPS-enabled camera, you can turn it off in iPhoto preferences. Again, unless you've separated your photos be street address, all the photos taken in that location will be grouped together, sorted chronologically. Click on a red pin, and you'll be able to browse all of the photos taken at that location.
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You'll be presented with a map with red pins where you've either assigned a place or taken photos with an iPhone or another GPS-enabled camera. To view your photos by location, click on the Places link in the left-hand column of iPhoto. Places does not seem to recognize many street addresses, but after you assign a place and iPhoto drops a red pin onto the map, you can move the pin to the exact spot on the street where the picture was taken, if you are particular about your coordinates or take a lot of shots in the same city or town and want to organize your photos under separate red pins. You can enter a city and state or get more specific and use your street name. To add a place, click on Assign a Place above the map and type in your place. The information pane will appear to the right of your photos, and it will let you add a title and description to your photo along with information for Faces and Places, as seen in the image to the right. To assign a place to a non-geotagged photo, first highlight the photo or photos or an event in iPhoto and then click the Info button in the lower right corner. For this tutorial, I am using iPhoto '11. But for older cameras without GPS, you can assign a place to photos and events in iPhoto. iPhoto will pull in the GPS information when you import photos to your iPhoto library.
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If you have a GPS-enabled camera or pretty much any recent smartphone, using iPhoto Places is seamless.
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