If you use an iPhone and don’t pay for an iCloud plan, you’ve almost definitely encountered at least one message that your iCloud storage is nearly used up. The free 5GB of storage is quickly taken up ...
When you first set up an iCloud account for your iPad or iPhone, you get access to a small free allocation of online storage: 5GB. This can be useful for backups and for accessing photos, documents ...
Apple includes 5 GB of free cloud storage with each iCloud account, yet with iPhone and iPad cameras improving each year and an expanding amount of ways to utilize iCloud, that free storage fills up ...
This is a common problem that people like Larry from Marshville, North Carolina, are facing. That's why I love it when people send in great questions to this tech reporter who's been on this beat for ...
Apple gives iCloud users 5 GB of iCloud storage space. At first, 5 GB does not seem like a lot of storage space, however it is. For a majority of users it is plenty. For others, it isn’t. This storage ...
Why I switched to a NAS storage drive to backup files - and ditched iCloud and Dropbox for good ...
Apple understands that device backups are only useful when the process is automatic and done regularly, which is why the feature is baked into iOS and handled by iCloud. Before iCloud, the prevailing ...
iCloud Storage Full Yet Again? Here's a Fast Fix ...
Apple's recent Wonderlust event brought forth not only the eagerly anticipated iPhone 15 series and the Apple Watch Series 9 ...
Last night, Apple launched a first developer beta of iCloud.com, a set of web apps based on the iCloud functionality originally introduced in iOS 5 beta that mimic the appearance of Apple’s Lion ...
A few years ago, Apple decided to offer seamless optimization for storage on your Mac. Instead of knowing where every byte (or gigabyte) lived, you could enable optimization in Photos or iCloud Drive.
Sick of Apple's iCloud ransom notes demanding money for more storage space? WSJ's Joanna Stern has tips on how to defuse the situation. Photo: Natalia Osipova/The Wall Street Journal. I never send it ...