On 2011-04-15 19:34 , Andy Lee wrote:
One thing to note if you end up with either device is that syncing in
iTunes doesn't copy new photos that you've taken to your computer. You
need to run iPhoto (or Image Capture) to do that. I think this is bad.
Just letting you know.

yeah, that's the kind of point to sort out after you know the basics, though with an iPad or Touch the photos are a bit less, er, strong, compared to the iPhone, so one might have less incentive to move them anywhere at all ... however there are interesting ways to interact with the camera that can automatically sync the photos; for example FileMaker Go can snap photos directly into a database which can then sync to a desktop FileMaker database, and you can snap photos directly into Evernote (one of my most used apps on my iPhone) and they'll sync automatically to the cloud & the desktop


As for what you'd want to store with all the gigabytes available, the
only thing I can think of is movies.

yeah, another of the fine points that you aren't going to learn at apple.com; lots of movies, huge photo databases, huge music libraries, maybe a few other special cases; other than that the smallest memory size is probably all you need; in fact resale prices are quite good, so if you really do need more space, it won't be too hard to trade up if/when you need to
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