July 2, 2024

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Apple Should Launch 1TB iCloud Plan

Apple Should Launch 1TB iCloud Plan

Apple’s iCloud plans are a very good option if you have multiple branded devices and want to sync all your photos between them, or prefer to upload them to the cloud in case you lose your iPhone. Plus, they now include features like “hide email” or Special relay Which creates a safer and more private environment for iPhone use. There is another problem: Apple urgently needs to launch a 1TB plan. Currently, the most popular plans are 50GB, 200GB, and 2TB. There remains a clear gap that Cupertino should try to bridge by offering a middle ground.

iCloud is the best cloud storage service an iPhone user can sign up for. It is seamlessly integrated and unlike any other service. Apple EcosystemOperating systems and their products. Includes exclusive features such as private rotation Or Hide Email, which allows you to browse Safari with complete anonymity — no one, not even Apple or your ISP, can know what you’re looking at — and generate random emails linked to your account so you don’t have to reveal yours. Real email on web pages that do not generate enough trust for you.

iCloud: Perfect Service, Except for One Failure

Its main function, of course, is to offer cloud storage options for those people who don’t have what their phones include. If you take a lot of photos or if you always want to have a backup of everything uploaded to the cloud in case you lose your device, you’ll have to purchase an iCloud plan, since Apple only provides… 5 GB free By all accounts, this in 2024, and I’m sorry for Apple, is insulting. In 2024, one will do absolutely nothing with 5GB.

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So, I suggest that Apple increase this free storage to 50GB, which is the plan that currently costs 99 cents. This leaves the 200GB plan for €2.99, and the 2TB plan for €9.99. I would add the 1TB plan to this formula for around €5.99, since going from 200GB to 2TB is a bit of a stretch for most people. For example, I had to sign up for the 2TB plan with only 416GB occupied, and I share my space with family members. The 200GB version falls short of the 2TB, and goes beyond it. A 1TB option It would be ideal for most of these cases.

Of course, if Apple “forces” you to subscribe to a plan you don’t need, because it doesn’t offer this option on purpose – it’s impossible not to discuss it in a meeting – there won’t be much left to do. Obviously, on some occasions it is necessary to jump through hoops, as in this case, subscribing to something one doesn’t want, but for which there is no alternative. We’ll have to wait until Cupertino changes its mind, or until it needs more than 1 TB iCloud storageso the 2TB option is the best option for my situation, and for many other situations.