![]() Update: Starting with iOS 10, I am once again seeing immediate uploads of photos from my iPhone when connected to Wi-Fi, whether I’m using the phone or not, and whether connected to a power source or not (might still need to be above 50% battery). From there, you (or others in your team) can download it on mobile, and post the image. Instead, upload the image to Google Drive to share with others. If you don’t open the Photos app, your iPhone will upload new photos if it is connected to a power source and locked, and it has sufficient battery. If you email your images to others (or even to yourself), you still run the risk of image compression. I’m guessing this was done to keep from eating up your bandwidth while you may be doing something else. ![]() It used to upload as soon as you connected to Wi-Fi (possibly only if you had sufficient battery), but as of iOS 9 that no longer appears to be the case. The key is for you to open the Photos app on your iPhone. ![]() If your MacBook is plugged in to a power source and/or has the Photos app open, it will download photos as soon as they are in iCloud.īoth your devices need to be connected to Wi-Fi for the aforementioned to occur. At the very bottom of the Photos tab, you should immediately see the indicator Uploading… ![]() When you take a photo from your iPhone, switch to the Photos app.
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