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“Whether brushing an effect onto a photo, shooting a movie trailer or jamming with friends to record a song, iPhoto, iMovie and GarageBand let you make amazing creations on iPad and iPhone.”Īccording to Apple, iPhoto has been completely “reimagined” for the iPad and iPhone. “With the introduction of iPhoto, we’ve brought the entire suite of iLife apps to iOS and users are going to love it,” said Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing, after yesterday's keynote address.Īpple was yet to include the application in the App Store, following yesterday's keynote address. With this new addition, Apple’s iLife suite has now been fully ported to the iPad.
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iPhoto on the iPad, and to a lesser extent, iPhone, feels like fun.Apple’s new iPhoto application is now available as a five dollar download (four Euros) in the App Store, next to the updated versions of GarageBand and iMovie. And that comes down to less easily quantified metrics like ease-of-use and “joy in using.” On that front, iPhoto is no Instagram, for sure, but it’s definitely more enjoyable to swipe your finger across images to adjust them that it ever was edit photos while sitting at your Mac, clicking your mouse. But that’s more for people who care about things like tooltips, layers, and pixel limits – for an app to be a hit, it will have to convince mainstream users to take a shot on it, too.
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For an in-depth review as to why, Ars Technica has a good read.
![iphoto ios iphoto ios](https://fwd.nl/app/uploads/Apple-iPhoto-iPad.jpg)
In many ways, it beats Adobe’s iOS version of Photoshop.
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I installed the app myself without even thinking twice – I mean, really, why not? Even as someone who’s far, far, far from being a professional photographer, it’s a great app in the sense of having a wealth of photo-editing tools all in one places. After all, we’re not all musicians, but practically everyone takes photos. Maybe it’s not perfect, but for $4.99 and guaranteed support thanks to the iGeniuses, it’s likely to be one of Apple’s hits, where others, like GarageBand perhaps, may have more niche appeal.
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So far, more users seem to be happy with the app than they are displeased, at least based on iTunes reviews – iPhoto has 1,114 five-star reviews and 467 one-star reviews in iTunes, with a couple hundred plus in the 2, 3, and 4-star ranges. But given the broad appeal of photo editing, it may end up being one of the most most popular Apple-branded apps yet. It’s also the third addition to Apple’s iLife suite, whose GarageBand and iMovie apps have previously been ported to iOS. With the iOS app, you can compare photos side-by-side, grab and move corners around to crop photos, touch up photos using a variety of fingertip brushes, add effects to photos by tapping, and more. IPhoto, of course, is an ideal showcase for the new iPad’s capabilities, featuring a completely reworked interface designed to take advantage of the new iPad’s crisp resolution as well as the multi-touch gestures that Apple’s devices and others have made popular. (Apparently, iPhoto’s metrics as of today aren’t a nice, round enough figure to be worth highlighting.) That doesn’t mean as of today, to be clear, as the app was originally announced on March 7th in conjunction with the new, Retina display-ready iPad. This figure was reported first by The Loop, but Apple confirmed to us the same thing – 1 million in 10 days. The number of actual downloads may be much higher. But Apple is counting such an installation only once in this metric. Given the app’s universal nature, it’s likely that many are installing it at least twice – once on the iPhone, or possibly the iPod Touch, and then again on the iPad. That’s not app downloads, mind you, but unique users. With a metric that’s bound to make mobile app developers jealous, Apple has confirmed that its newly launched iOS-compatible version of iPhoto hit the 1 million user mark, only 10 days after its release.