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How to clear space in your Google for free

Popular Science

Make full use of the 15GB you get in Gmail, Photos, and Drive for free. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. If Google keeps bothering you to pay for cloud storage, it's not just you. You only get a relatively measly 15GB of storage free of charge with a Google account, and you have to split that across Gmail, Google Photos, and Google Drive. That 15GB can fill up quickly, but it doesn't have to.


Samsung plans to integrate Google Photos into its TVs

Engadget

The company aims to be the first to offer this feature. Samsung has that it aims to be the first to natively integrate Google Photos into TVs. The aim is for Google Photos to work seamlessly with, Samsung's souped-up version of Bixby. This would help to make user photos part of the day-to-day TV experience, with photos appearing while navigating the TV's OS during contextual and convenient moments. The company says users will be able to explore their Google Photos libraries in three new experiences. The first is called Memories, and will show curated stories based on people, locations and meaningful moments.


Rid your desk of paper clutter

Popular Science

All you need is a free app and your phone. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. If your home office is piled up high with papers, getting these documents digitized isn't as daunting a task as you might have thought. You don't need a big flatbed scanner or expensive software: All you need is your smartphone and Google Drive for Android or iOS . Load up Google Drive, point your phone's camera at a document, and you can turn it into a PDF that can be safely stored in the cloud--and which can be sorted and searched through like any other file in Google Drive.


The 6 best photo editing apps for your phone

Popular Science

You can do more with your pictures--you just need the right app. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. You've likely got a plethora of photos stored on your phone, charting out every day (or maybe even every hour) in detail, but have you done anything with them lately? Maybe you share them just as they are--or perhaps you leave them locked away. The right photo editing app can help you to do more with your photos, and make the most of them before sharing.


Gear News of the Week: Veo 3 Comes to Google Photos, and Garmin Adds Satellite Comms to a Watch

WIRED

A few months ago, Google debuted a feature in Google Photos that lets you convert your existing photos into short videos using generative AI. These videos introduce slight synthetic movements to your stills, so a person may appear to slightly shift around in the frame, or a picture of your sleeping pup could gain a leg twitch. This week, the company upgraded this feature with its Veo 3 video generation model, which boosts the quality of the results. To play around with it, head to any photo in Google Photos, tap the three-dot button at the top right, and tap Create. Choose the Photo to Video option, and then pick between Subtle Movement or I'm Feeling Lucky, which will be a little more creative.


How Google's 'Ask Photos' uses AI to find the pictures you want

FOX News

The CyberGuy explains steps you can take to protect yourself from scams. Google Photos has always been a handy way to store and organize your pictures, but its latest feature, Ask Photos, is taking things to a whole new level. Powered by Google's Gemini AI, Ask Photos lets you search your photo library using natural language. Let's take a look at what makes Google Photos AI search so different, what's improved and how it could change the way you interact with your memories. Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.


This Website Shows How Much Google's AI Can Glean From Your Photos

WIRED

Software engineer Vishnu Mohandas decided he would quit Google in more ways than one when he learned the tech giant had briefly helped the US military develop AI to study drone footage. In 2020, he left his job working on Google Assistant and also stopped backing up all of his images to Google Photos. He feared that his content could be used to train AI systems, even if they weren't specifically ones tied to the Pentagon project. "I don't control any of the future outcomes that this will enable," Mohandas thought. "So now, shouldn't I be more responsible?" Mohandas, who taught himself programming and is based in Bengaluru, India, decided he wanted to develop an alternative service for storing and sharing photos that is open source and end-to-end encrypted.


Google Photos will show when images have been modified with AI

Engadget

Big tech firms have been releasing AI tools all over their software offerings over the past year. But as it becomes ever easier to manipulate images and video with generative AI, there's been a second wave of launching companion policies to better inform people when that technology has been applied to content. Google is the latest to follow the trend. After debuting tools like the Magic Editor last spring and incorporating AI into its video editor last month, Google Photos will begin labeling visual content that has been modified with AI. Google was already tagging AI-modified images with corresponding metadata, but now a plain language statement will accompany edited photos.


Google's Gemini-powered photo search arrives in early access

Engadget

Google's AI-powered Photos upgrades are beginning to trickle in. Ask Photos, the Gemini-powered chatbot that lets you get ultra-specific and conversational with your photo searches, is launching in early access for select users in the US. In addition, the improved search for more descriptive Google Photos queries begins rolling out today for all English-speaking users. The upgraded search in Google Photos lets you use more descriptive queries. For example, while you could have searched for "lake" before, you can now enter "kayaking on a lake surrounded by mountains."


Google Photos Is Getting a Gemini Infusion to Power Its Search

WIRED

Google Photos has a decent search experience right now. I was recently trying to find some photos of my sister's engagement from a few years ago, and a simple "yellow dress" with her name added in front brought all the images to my fingertips within moments. But Google thinks it can do even better and is now supercharging the search function with improvements to natural language processing and, you guessed it, artificial intelligence. Improving the search experience is crucial because our online photo libraries are getting bigger and bigger every year. That means it's harder to find those photos from Dad's 60th birthday without sifting through so much other stuff.