Ever since I switched from iPhoto to Photos, I am unable to find individual photos to attach to emails in gmail. When I use the attach icon, the only option I get is to attach the entire Photos app. I have both the attach and insert picture ions on my menu bar, but both get the same result. This used to be easy with iPhoto -- what am I doing wrong?

With just hours to go until the December 1 deadline when Google starts enforcing an updated inactive account policy, users are understandably concerned about what will happen to their content such as Gmail messages, photos and documents.


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11/28 update: While data from inactive Google accounts, including Google Photos and Gmail content, is likely to be deleted from December 1, other Google-held data appears to have already gone missing in action, according to some users. Google Drive users have been reporting how their data has disappeared, as their accounts appear to have been reset to a status from May 2023. Taking to the official support forum for Google Drive, users have said that their desktop Drive folder was missing six months of files and showing a structure from May.

So, what must you do to guarantee that your precious memories are saved from this purge? First, if your Google account is linked to an educational establishment or is a business one, it is outside of the scope of the inactive account policy and your content and data are safe. If your account includes YouTube content, then it is also safe. Everything else, however, is within scope, provided there has been no account access across the previous two years.

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If you use Gmail frequently, you might need to back up all photos from your Gmail emails to Google Photos. Can you directly back up photos from your Gmail account to Google Photos? Of course yes, you can try the Add to Photos feature in Gmail to add. And here you can find other ways to make all photos quickly moved from Gmail to Google Photos.

1. Please click the Show search option icon next to the search box, tick Has attachment, and click Search to list all emails containing attachments like photos.

Now, you have mastered how to backup photos from my Gmail emails to Google Photos. Just follow the above solutions on your computer and phone to transfer photos from Gmail emails to Google Photos easily. Compared with other solutions, MultCloud could be your best choice, so why not give it a try?

I've personally found this problem happens when sending images as attachments using the gmail mobile app, at least on IOS. (Though I believe it's an app feature, considering I've had it happening with multiple phones on different versions of IOS) Not only does it turn transparents images to just having a solid background, I've found it also sometimes changes the image type (like .png or .jpeg) and/or the image size/dimensions as well as the quality. After messing around with it for a little/troubleshooting in an attempt to figure out what's going on, I discovered that the problem happens in the image attachment process to the initial email itself. When attaching the image to the email, gmail seems to change the image, and this can be spotted if you preview or even just look at the image itself in the email while you're making it. (Though it may not be as easily spotted if you use light mode/theme on the app and/or your device, as I use the dark theme, so the opaque white background on the uploaded, previously transparent, image is pretty easy to notice in contrast to the dark theme of the rest of the app. I've been unable to find a setting that turns this compression/altering or whatever feature off, and in the past I kinda just gave up and uploaded the image to my cloud, and downloaded it from there onto my computer so I could share it there instead, or if it needed to be sent somewhere in better quality (even desktop version of gmail can be a little finicky at times for some in my experience), i just send it over discord or use a USB or something.

Hi, while users are poking around in the gmail settings to find the correct switch, (the issue is not on Photoshop's end, unless you save yo jpeg) you can share links to your files hosted on creative cloud: -cloud/help/share.html

Oh I know it's not photoshop's end! I mean I did specifically state it was an issue with gmail ahaha- I personally only have access to adobe software at school using shared licenses, whatever setup we have makes it so you cannot use the creative cloud, and are only able to access the software on those computers, so unfortunately using creative cloud won't do anything for me personally, as I am unable to do so- it's alright though, I've just been uploading the images to my Google Photos account on my mobile device, and then logging into my Google Photos account on the desktop, and downloading them from there and the quality stays the way it's supposed to when I do it that way, so Im good for now- was more just sharing my info on it in case it may help anyone or if anyone else knew about the issue with Gmail I guess lol

When you annotate emails, Gmail users view and interact with your promotionsdirectly from their inbox. From the Promotions tab, users can click on theannotated text or image to learn more about the promotion, without having toopen the email.

I have a huge number of e-mail messages saved in Gmail with single image (snapshot.jpg, ~500Kb each) attachments. Some messages are combined into e-mail chains (but not all of them due to e-mail chain limit of 100 messages). Now I want to download all attachments from such messages.

It is critical that you delete your photos once you've moved them as Google doesn't provide administrators with any ability to delete photos, so if you don't remove them then we'll be forced to delete your entire account, including your email contents. We don't want to do this, so make sure you delete your photos.

There is also a free 15GB plan. If you have less than 15GB of photos you can just move it to a free plan. There's nothing stopping you creating a new Google free plan just for your photos if you are using a personal Google Drive for storage currently.

Google doesn't provide a tool or easy way to delete your old photos - you just need to select them in batches (we have found up to 1000 works best) and delete. The University has no ability to delete your photos for you. Remember you must do this step otherwise we will have to remove your entire account, mail, drive and photos.

Emailing photos can be a good way to keep in touch with friends and family, or quickly show someone something. On Mac computers the default program to handle photos is iPhoto. When emailing photos using Gmail, you can use the "Photos" section in the file upload window to preview and select the iPhoto images you want to email before you send them.

Click on "Photos" in the left sidebar of the file upload browser to load the iPhoto image previews into the file upload window. Click on the image that you want to email. Select multiple photos from iPhoto by holding down the "Command" key while clicking each image you want.

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You also can paste the image at the desired location in the email from the clipboard using Control+V (for Windows and Linux) or Command+V (for Mac).

I use this feature many times per day and I find myself repeating very often. Is there a way to make it so when you are in gmail and type a certain thing, that gmail immediately automatically makes it a hyperlink? like can I create a list of key phrases that it will recognize automatically do that? ff782bc1db

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