When i go to a connected iPhone and look at my iCloud available backups, I see 1 for my ipad and 1 for my iphone. However, when i go to restore my iphone, the only backup available to choose froom is the ipad backup. It wont show the iphone backup that I know exists. Help! All devices were updated to 5.1 and backups were proformed on everything prior to restoral process.

Works excatly the same updating from 5.0.1 to 6.0.1. Had my phone replaced, it was backed up to icloud but the icloud couldn't find the back when i went to restore. Updated the software and appears no worries! Thank you!


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Thanks for the advice. I had the exact same problem, except I had my iPad replaced instead of the iPhone. So I updated the software on the new iPad from 5.01 to 5.1, and voila... the iPad back up was there, and I successfully restored. Thank you so much!

Hi,

Please advice the need for 1password to have its own in-app backup since backup is already enabled by default in iCloud backups.

If I disable the iCloud backup in iCloud's settings and just enable the in-app backup, will I be able to restore all my passwords if I get a new device by using restore from iCloud. Thanks.

We've found iCloud's backup system does not reliably back up and restore 1Password data. The best way to avoid a difficulty is to use a 1Password.com subscription account. That way whenever you get a new device you simply login to your 1Password account and all of your data is accessible.

I know you have the 1password account available for subscription. I hope that you can be impartial to both subscribed and non subscribed users. You did not answer my question at all.

Please allow me to ask you again.

If I disable 1password backup in the settings of the backup of iOS to iCloud and just have the in-app backup to iCloud enabled, will I be able to restore my passwords to a new device using iCloud restore. Thanks.

I believe I misunderstood your question, at least in part, and I also believe it is due to a difference in terminology. Please bear with me a moment. A backup is different than sync. If you are using the standalone version of 1Password (no subscription) and want a backup then you'll need to follow the guide I linked above. If you want to sync your 1Password data, such that the encrypted data is stored with iCloud and kept up to date on multiple devices, you can set up syncing with iCloud:

Sorry if it feels like we're discussing semantics a bit here but it is actually an important distinction. Sync doesn't protect you if, for example, you accidentally delete an item. A backup does. But either can potentially protect against losing data if a device is replaced (due to loss, damage, an upgrade, or whatever other reason). Ultimately if using the standalone product our recommendation would be to take advantage of both backups and sync.

Upload the images to iCloud. And double the effort by backing up the same images somewhere else as well. The easiest is a small portable hard drive. A LaCie Rugged drive with 4 terabytes of storage costs around $150, or about $50 more than 1 year of 2 TB service from Apple.

Dropbox and Microsoft charge $9.99 monthly for 1 TB of storage, Google $9.99 for 2 TB of storage and SmugMug starts at $9 monthly with unlimited storage. Amazon also offers unlimited photo (but not video) backup at no charge to subscribers of the $139 yearly Amazon Prime shipping and entertainment service. Pure, no-gimmicks online photo backup + at least one hard drive on the desk makes me feel more comfortable. Better would be one drive on the desk, one drive offsite and online backup.

After turning on iCloud Photos, turn on "Optimize Storage" in the Settings. Low resolution photos will AUTOMATICALLY be kept on your phone and the high-res files will AUTOMATICALLY be kept in the cloud. This will prevent your phone from running out of storage. Whenever you do something with the Apple Photos app and a higher-res file is needed, the high-res version will be downloaded AUTOMATICALLY. The only time you should delete a photo is if you never want to see it again. And 2TB of storage for all of those high-res files is $9.99 per month. 2TB is a lot of storage for iPhone photos.

Beyond simply storage, Apple, Google, and Adobe all have AI (Artificial Intelligence) features like facial and object recognition. Search for the word "dog" on any of those services and all of the photos you have taken with a dog will appear. And every month or so I get a slideshow with music from Apple made with photos from a special day or event. I don't tell it what to make, it just knows. For instance, it knows photos taken on December 25th are from Christmas and makes it for me, excluding photos with eyes closed, etc. Pretty amazing stuff.

That\u2019s the worst thing he could do. Because once they\u2019re uploaded to iCloud, the next time it scans his phone for an automatic backup, it will notice that the Costa Rica pix are gone and in turn delete them from the cloud backup as well.

For pure photo backup, because of these weird, arcane rules, Apple\u2019s iCloud is about the worst place to go. Apple\u2019s help support reps told me over several calls that iCloud is meant for backup of your devices, not just your photo library, and as a way to have the same data available on all your Apple devices, not just the iPhone.

As Apple puts it: \u201CAutomatically upload and safely store all your photos and videos in iCloud so you can browse, search and share from any of your devices.\u201D Notice the word backup doesn\u2019t appear there anywhere?

Remember the old Apple ad asking us to \u201CThink Different?\u201D It\u2019s the same thing when it comes to backup. Apple just does it differently. In Apple\u2019s world, you don\u2019t delete images off the phone, you just convert them to low-resolution copies, and download the high-resolution originals from iCloud.

We\u2019re all taking more photos and videos than ever before, in higher resolution, and the fact is, we outgrow our phone\u2019s storage all the time. All of us needs to pay more attention to backup strategies. Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Dropbox and SmugMug have different plans (they all charge) that don\u2019t involve deleting your cloud photos if you\u2019ve gotten rid of them from your phone.

This isn\u2019t the proper or ideal way to back up photos, however. Nor is it a long-term solution: Apple will actually delete your files from its cloud 180 days after you turn off iCloud backup, so be aware of that.

6. See when the last successful backup was recorded; if it's in the last few hours, that might be good enough. If the backup isn't fresh and you're connected to a Wi-Fi network, tap Back Up Now and wait for the backup to complete.

3. In the Backups section, click Back Up Now to back up your most important data to iCloud. You'll have to wait a bit for iTunes to finish creating the iCloud backup.

Quick tip: You can also perform a full backup of your phone as well and save it on your computer. In the Backups section, make sure the This Computer radial button is ticked instead of iCloud.

Quick tip: You can also create a full backup of the iPhone on that Mac. In the Backups section, tick the Back up all of the data on your iPhone to this Mac radial button and then click Apply in the bottom left corner.

I recently did an iPhone 6 to iPhone 6s restore at an Apple store. The clerk there said the 29GBs of storage used on the device is only 1GB on the Apple iCloud backup servers. She could also see many previous iCloud backups that were also 1GB. Most of my data is recorded audio which has to be re-Added to the iPhone's music Library via iTunes or a 3rd party app. The iCloud backups are encrypted with Apple's keys on their servers and during transmission to Apple servers. The backup is decrypted by Apple (without having to know the device passcode) for law enforcement access with proper court orders.

iCloud does not back up the songs that you have NOT purchased from iTunes. iTunes purchases should not reflect in the size of your backup. iCloud stores your purchase history and then re-downloads the files at restore.

I've been using Evernote for a number of years on my desktop PC, iPad and iPhone. I've just noticed the the iCloud backup file size for Evernote on the iPad is 1.5GB, whereas it is only 700 MB on the iPhone. Can anyone explain why there is such a discrepancy in the file sizes.

Do I need to use the iCloud backup service if all the data is stored on the Evernote servers? Surely if I have to reinstall Evernote on one of my devices then it will automatically sync will the data stored centrally by Evernote?

Now if you need to reinstall that database, you can do so from a local or an iCloud backup, or you can wait for a few hours while it downloads from Evernote's servers. If you do have any Local (unsynced) Notebooks though, they won't be present, because unsynced does exactly what it says on the can. The only copy is on your hard drive - and (apparently) in iCloud. 006ab0faaa

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