If there were ever a time to switch from Apple Photos to Google Photos on your iPhone, it’s next week.
At its annual Google I/O conference on Wednesday, Google (GOOG, GOOGL) announced a slew of helpful updates rolling out over the next few days that will make the already superior Google Photos app even better, particularly for iPhone users who snap and manage a ton of pics on their devices. (And let’s face it, there are a lot of us.)
Here are just a few reasons why iPhone users should seriously consider shelving Apple Photos and giving Google Photos a shot:
Unlimited storage
Storage capacity is a real issue for Apple Photos if you want to back up your pics to the cloud. Apple’s iCloud gives users the first 5 gigabytes of monthly cloud storage for free, but wants them to pony up $.99 for 50 gigabytes, $2.99 for 200 gigabytes, and $9.99 for a whopping 1 terabyte.
Not so with Google Photos, which offers unlimited storage. Sure, you have to be fine with your images being saved at a maximum of 16 megapixels. But unless you’re someone like famed photographer Annie Leibovitz, you probably don’t care or won’t notice the difference. The camera on my iPhone 6S Plus, for instance, is of the 12 megapixel variety, so this is a non-issue for me, as well as the millions of other likeminded iPhone owners out there.
Smarter Artificial Intelligence
At Google I/O, Google said it was no longer a “mobile-first” company but an “AI-first” company. That may sound like eye-rolling marketing speak, but it’s true when it comes to Google Photos, at least.
While Apple Photos and Google Photos both use AI to power face detection, Google Photos is simply more accurate. Case in point, while Google Photos identifies my face in all my photos, as well, me, Apple Photos grouped photos with my face into three distinctly different people. (See below.)
Google Lens
Think of Google Lens, a new feature, as image recognition on steroids. It uses AI to understand what’s happening in a photo and then serves up related actions to take based on that. For example, Google Lens could identify the restaurant in a photo and display some information about it pulled from online reviews and operating hours. It may also serve up options like loading up Google search results, Google Maps directions, and calling up the place. Apple Photos, at the moment, doesn’t do any of that.
This is probably only the start of what is, essentially, a more intelligent Google Photos. During Wednesday’s conference keynote, Google demonstrated it’s already possible to remove large unwanted obstructions in a photo like a fence. And while Google hasn’t said such a feature is coming down the pike, it seems like only a matter of time that users will have the ability to remove items from their images with a simple finger tap.