OS lineup, but it still isn’t enough. Tons of people already spend time trying to reduce the size of their photos, apps, and other bits of data in order to save space and not meet the dreaded “Cannot take photo” alert when it’s clutch time. You don’t have to suffer the scourge of running out of storage if you play your cards right.
If you get some offsite storage, clear some older apps, and listen to your phone when it tells you to drop some texts, and you’ll (probably) never have to worry about running out of space again. Get some i. Cloud storage. Apple cut the monthly price of its 2. TB i. Cloud storage plan to $9.
It’s a great move since more apps are opting to use i. Cloud syncing to store documents and data. It still features the dirt cheap $0. GB of cloud storage, a plan I just signed up for considering I just ran out of storage thanks to my i.
OS backups. The drop in price is a great incentive to sign up for more storage, even though i. Cloud isn’t the most loved cloud storage platform. Compared to Google Drive’s $9.
TB of storage, it’s actually a pretty good deal if you’re deep in Apple’s ecosystem. Also added to i. Cloud is family storage sharing, so feel free to share that 2. TB plan with up to six “family members.”Since one of its suggestions for freeing up storage on your phone is to send your photos to the i. Cloud Photo Library, purchasing the base storage plan might be the way to go instead of shelling out another $1. Phone. Back up (or just delete) your messages.
Surprisingly, your blue bubbles and funny pictures you send to your friends take up more space than you realize—enough so that i. OS 1. 1 includes storage management for i. Messages. Earlier this week Apple showed off i. OS 1. 1, the next iteration of the i.
Phone and i. Pad operating. Coupled with its new file formats for videos and photos that promise to make them smaller while preserving quality, culling your messages for space should be less of a hassle. Granted, it’s a feature that should’ve been introduced when Apple still made 1. GB i. OS devices, but it’s nice to have. Say goodbye to old apps.
You know you’ve got a bunch of apps on your phone that haven’t been touched in a while. Lucky for you, your good friend Apple is here to help you get rid of those dusty squares on your device by barring them from i. OS 1. 1 until they get their act together. The move might not save you a ton of storage, but it sounds like a death blow for games that are large and unsupported, even if you’re a daily user. In short, 3. 2- bit apps will not work on i.
OS 1. 1. The decision isn’t new; Apple announced the change from 3. December 2. 01. 4.
Apps that haven’t updated to the more modern 6. OS device to run poorly, but in i. Autocad 2011 Free Download Full Version With Crack 32 Bits here. OS 1. 1 they simply will not run. Instead you’ll be greeted with a passive- aggressive message telling you how lazy the developer is for not updating their app. You can see which apps haven’t updated to i.
OS 1. 1 and purge them yourself, of course. In Settings, go to General > About > Applications and you’ll see a list of outdated apps.
Apple’s also copying a feature found on certain Android phones in order to save space taken up by larger apps. The “Offload Unused App” feature lets you delete whatever app you aren’t using but keep the documents and other personal data associated with it on your device. When it’s time to download it again, just tap the greyed out app and watch it download. You can enable the Offload feature in Settings > General > i. Phone Storage and see which apps it suggests you eliminate until further notice.