![]() How to transfer your iPhone photos to a Mac with a cable 1. There are some solid options for moving photos wirelessly, but we found they can struggle to deal with large videos and you may see your images re-compressed, which will reduce image quality. You need to use a third-party work-around for wireless transfers. In the Finder on your Mac, choose Connect to Server from the Go menu to open the window. ![]() If your iCloud account doesn’t have enough available storage space for your photos and videos to all be in iCloud at once, simply download then delete the ones already in iCloud. Using a PC? We recommend sticking with a cable at it feels much like drag and dropping files from a USB stick or external hard drive. Connect your Mac to your PC using a standard Ethernet cable and ensure both computers are on. If you’ve got iCloud Photos enabled, simply login to /photos, then download the ones you would like. AirDrop is also intuitive, and quick to get going: more enjoyable to use even with an older Mac that may not beat cabled speeds. ![]() With recent-generation hardware, AirDrop can actually be faster than a cabled connection as Lightning limits transfers to USB 2.0 speeds – that's 60MB per second in theory, but it is closer to 30MB according to our testing. That does not hold here, if you want to transfer to a Mac rather than a PC. ![]() The received wisdom for file transfers is to use a cable if you want quick transfers, or wireless if you’re on-the-go or don’t have a cable to hand. Open up the Photos app, and then tap a photo you want to send to your Macor hit Select and choose multiple photos to transfer. ![]()
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