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Obviously, the app requires a few extra seconds to load a full-resolution photo from Dropbox – thumbnails are loaded at a lower-res to speed up the experience – but everything else works just like the old app. Photos loaded from the Dropbox retain the same options of local photos: you can view metadata, share photos, and open a location panel to see where a photo was taken on a map. Photos+ 1.1 has kept the app’s straightforward approach and visualization of photos, but thanks to Dropbox integration it can now look for photos inside a Dropbox folder. As you scroll, you can tap thumbnails to open photos in full-screen when you want to dismiss a photo, you flick it up or down like a card. There are no settings, no filters to exclude screenshots from the list, and no special gestures to learn. Photos+ doesn’t have any time or location-based sorting feature – it’s a mosaic of large photo thumbnails displayed in reverse chronological order (from newest to oldest).

Photos+ provides an alternative way to view photos you’ve taken on your iPhone if you don’t like the new Photos app of iOS 7.

Photos+ 1.0 was a simple Photos.app replacement with viewing features that supported EXIF metadata for location, time stamps, and more. Photos+, which I first covered in December when Second Gear launched it on the App Store, has today been updated to version 1.1, adding Dropbox integration and finding a new home at SilverPine Software. Loom marks the second acquisition by Dropbox in the past month – in late March, the company acquired social reading app Readmill for an undisclosed sum.
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Existing Loom users will be able to continue using the service until users will also be able to request an archive of their libraries with original photos and videos in a.
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Loom allowed users to set up a free trial with 5 GB of storage and the possibility to extend free space to 10 GB through referrals the service had both monthly and yearly plans starting at $4.99 and $49.99 respectively for 50 GB of storage.įor existing Loom users, Dropbox has built a migration tool that will transfer photos from Loom to Dropbox Loom storage will be converted to Dropbox storage for free users, while Loom Pro customers will keep the same storage on Dropbox for free, for a year. And at the end of the day, that’s what matters most to us. We are enthusiastic about being able to contribute our ground level perspective to help craft a beautiful experience for our users. After spending some serious time investigating if this was the right move for us, we realized that Dropbox has solved many problems around scaling infrastructure and at Dropbox the Loom team will be able to focus entirely on building great features with a fantastic user experience. We share the common goal of crafting a high quality product, always putting users’ needs first. And now with Carousel comes a home for your photos and videos as well. Dropbox has invested the past seven years focusing on building a secure home for your files. We have worked hard on our product and feel that our vision aligns perfectly with Dropbox’s vision for Carousel. Loom allowed users to manage uploads on their computers with a desktop uploader, an option that is already available in the official Dropbox app for OS X with automatic Camera Uploads. Carousel displays photos with a vertical grid of thumbnails reminiscent of Loom, and, like Loom, it supports both photos and videos stored in the cloud unlike Loom, Carousel doesn’t have iPad or web clients for now, as it’s limited to an iPhone app with basic web sharing features.
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On April 9, Dropbox officially introduced Carousel, an iPhone and Android app aimed at replacing a device’s local Camera Roll with Dropbox photo storage. We’re making it quick and easy for you to access and manage your entire photo and video library on every device, without taking up local storage space. Easy to organize and manage, giving you complete control. Something effortlessly expandable, that can grow with your library, so you never run out of space. A personal media library that is the same wherever you go, and there when you need it. We needed something that works seamlessly. Often regarded as “what Apple’s Photo Stream” should have been, Loom was designed to keep one library of photos in sync across devices, with support for albums, full-res versions of the original files, and more. Built to let users delete media from their local devices, Loom featured support for both photos and videos, with automatic upload functionalities in a native iOS app and a desktop uploader for OS X. With a notice posted on their website today, Loom, a photo storage and management service originally launched in July 2013, announced that they’ve been acquired by Dropbox and will be joining the company.
