
Ultimately, we felt IDrive deserved “high scores for the sheer breadth of services offered – from backing up the photos on your smartphone to backing up the files on your company's servers.” That makes it an excellent choice for anyone who wants a secure place to organize their image collections online (as well as other file types).ĭuring our time with IDrive, we felt “while IDrive certainly has a few rough edges, you can't really fault the service in terms of the ground it covers and the high reliability.” It’s especially good for business users, thanks to its security measures and range of storage options. IDrive isn’t just one of the best Google Photos alternatives - it’s TechRadar Pro’s top pick for best cloud storage overall. By setting your photostream as public, other photographers can follow and comment on your work. Any other image that gets uploaded will be converted to the JPEG format.įlickr photos are organized in a tidy social feed, which you can set public or private. As we noted, “unfortunately, this leaves out RAW images that are popular with pro photographers. However, that file type support is limited - nothing beyond JPG, PNG, and non-animated GIFS. It excels at the unlimited storage, with a dedicated software tool, the cross platform support, and the ease of use especially with tagging images.” In our review, we said, “FlickrPro offers a strong entry into the cloud storage space of image and video storage, combining the social aspect for sharing the content. Images can be automatically uploaded, stored at full resolution, with a range of analytics tools for professionals (and the data-curious).

But to keep things really simple, there’s only one upgrade option: FlickrPro, which features unlimited photo cloud storage for a monthly, annual, or bi-annual subscription. Frequent photographers will likely outgrow the free limit pretty quickly.
