If ever there's an enormous crisis, like Maa Kunti, express my gratitude to God that if God doesn't are available my life, how would I remember you? I shouldn't be confused by my happiness, that's why you've got given me this grace.
Thank God every moment and keep singing this sentiment from the guts ,
Your burden is too much for me,
Which I am not capable of lifting.
I have come but I know
I am unable to return even at the speed .
Right now we are talking about WhatsApp Policy. And there is talk of violating your privacy.
Understand this, but nowadays most Gujju Bloggers make any sort of app viral. Is
Like what you'll appear as if once you grow old , install antivirus in your mobile and increase the speed of mobile.
A lot of those , that is, tons of apps are put up a day .
Now we do not believe a corporation like WhatsApp, Facebook that our data won't be stolen.
And you come and inquire from me to download such app locks?
Your WhatsApp group will mostly have people that come from a bourgeoisie family and are a touch educated and preparing for small-to-large government. Or older people that now have a sensible phone. And don't know what's true and what's false. That means you do not know what app to download and what data to possess .
That way you are feeling like you're selling out most people's data.
You know which app you set in only for views and money. Doesn't it sell data?
If the info of an enormous company like Truecaller are often leaked, then you set an app that suits you. That's all the data is leaking.
Millions of people will be. And you educated people inadvertently promote the app in such how . And giving data is not a good thing
web app, click Explore at the left), and at the top of the screen, you'll see People & Pets. It features a row of headshots from your photos. Click a person without a label and enter their name. In the future, searching by name in Google Photos will make it easier to find (almost) every picture of that person, dog, or cat. Google's face-matching takes care of the rest. (You may have to turn that feature on in the Android app.)
Internet users are not at a loss for services that automatically back up photos and provide access to them on any device. There's Dropbox, OneDrive, Amazon Photos, and iCloud, just to start. But Google Photos has grown fast since its launch in 2015.
The news about Google Photos lately hasn't been rosy, though. It once offered truly unlimited backup of all the photos (and videos) you take for free, even if it did downgrade any pics over 16 megapixels. Not anymore. Now, every picture you upload, no matter the size, counts against your allotted 15GB of free online storage with Google, which is shared with Gmail, Google Drive, and other Google services.
Google Photos came about by salvaging the best part of the Google+ social network that no one wanted to use—the photo storage and sharing. Google Photos also replaced our former Editors' Choice pick for photo software, Picasa, the desktop program Google acquired in 2004. You can still use the Picasa desktop software, but it'll never get an update. It's time to let it go.
You may be so mad at Google that you want to switch after its bait-and-switch, and we can't blame you. If so, there are plenty of alternatives. But if you're with Google for the long haul, maybe even willing to pay that $1.99 a month for 100GB, read on for how to get the most out of it. (Note: The stuff you uploaded before June 1, 2021, doesn't count against your 15GB.)
1. Show a Slideshow
Go into any album of images and display it as a slideshow, which is especially nice when you pair your device with a Chromecast With Google TV on a big TV. On the web or in the Android app, tap the ellipsis menu at the upper right. Select Slideshow and the album you're viewing will display photos in order.
Once you label people and pets within Google Photos, use them to create a Live Album, which will automatically add photos of certain people to that album as they're uploaded or backed up to Google Photos. They have a hefty limit of 20,000 images each. When you create a new album on mobile, tap Automatically add photos of people & pets, select the people or pets you want to include in the pop-up menu, tap Confirm, and you're good to go.
To help Google fine-tune its facial recognition, go into a Live Album, tap the person's name, and Google Photos may bring up a menu button that says Same or different person? to allow you to go on a face-matching binge that improves results.
4. Create a New Live Album From an Old Album
To make an existing album a Live album, open it, tap the ellipsis menu and select Options. The option to automatically add photos is right there—click the + icon and add a person or pet that has already been assigned a name. New pics will flow into the album as you take them.
5. Share a Library Auto-Magically
Sharing is a hallmark of almost everything you do with pictures online, and Google Photos is no exception. Specifically, you can share your entire photo library with your partner.
On the desktop, select Sharing on the left-hand navigation and click Partner Sharing (on mobile it's under your avatar > Google Photo Settings > Partner Sharing). Pick a person from your contacts who also uses Google Photos, and then you can choose to share either All photos or Photos of Specific People (made easy with the built-in facial recognition). Specify if you only want to share images from a specific date forward. Once confirmed, that person will have access to all images or that one face whenever recognized.
This is sharing one-way only. If you want to see the same person in your partner's photos, they have to share it back with you. Which is easy; when they accept, have them click Share Back at the top right.
6. Don't Share Your Location
Don't Share Your Location
Images taken with almost any device these days, especially smartphones, have location data. Google Photos uses that to actively map where your pics were taken. That's a nice feature for you, but when you share an image, you may not want the recipient to know exactly where the pic was taken. Turn it off by navigating to Settings > Hide photo location data (mobile) or Settings > Sharing > Hide photo location data (desktop). Then, when you generate a link to share an image, the person who sees the image at that link won't get any geo-data. (This doesn't work if you share by other means, such as social media.)
7. Quick Select Pics
Quick Select
On a mobile device, hold your finger on a picture to select, then drag your fingertip. All the pictures you touch will be selected. That makes it a lot easier to delete or move a bunch of photos in a batch, or use them with special tools like creating animations, movies, or collages.
8. Save Device Storage
Save Device Storage
With Back up & sync, Google Photos will upload and store any photos from your phone automatically. And once an image is backed up, the app can delete the local version from your phone or tablet to free up precious space. Do this in iOS and Android via Settings > Manage device storage > Free up space. It will ask if you want to really remove all the pictures Google Photos has backed up because it means deleting them from your Android Gallery or iOS Photos app (though they will temporarily reside in the recently deleted folder).
9. Deep Edit the Deep Blue
DEEP EDIT DEEP BLUE
Basic photo editing on Google Photos is a breeze—click on an image, click the Edit icon, and you're presented with filters to apply; sliders to adjust, light, and color (plus a "Pop" slider to make the image pop more); and a speedy crop/rotation tool. They're simple tools that work on mobile and desktop.
When you adjust light and color, you get a few extras by clicking the down arrow next to each slider. Under Light, there's exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, whites, blacks, and vignette (to put a spotlight on a section of the image). Under Color is saturation, warmth, tint, Skin Tone, and Deep Blue. That last one adjusts the color blue only, which is nice when the shots involve water. (For lush greens, crank up the saturation, then decrease Skin Tone and Deep Blue).
When making edits on the desktop, click and hold the cursor on the image (or hold the letter "O" on your keyboard) to instantly see how the edits look compared to the original.
10. Apply the Same Edits to Multiple Shots
If you've perfected edits on one image, apply them to a bunch of photos. On the desktop, while editing an image, go to the three-dot menu and select Copy edits. On the rest of the images, use the same menu to Paste Edits. You can also just use the copy/paste keyboard shortcuts (Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V, respectively). This isn't an option on the mobile apps.