4/5 rating based on 132 reviews. Read all reviews for Photo Transfer WiFi for iPhone.
Photo Transfer WiFi is free iOS app published by KeepSolid Inc.
SimplyMec
My MacBook don’t have airdrop & I needed it for my YouTube channel so this was like a total life saver fr ❤️
tonypop11
This app is a life saver. When I upgraded my iPhone 6 to an iPhone X all my photos were not on the new phone even though I did a restore in iTunes from a recent backup of the iPhone 6. iTunes used to be a great app but ever since Apple redid it I only find it useful for doing backups of apps. I had 2150+ photos. I still had my iPhone 6 but iPhoto would only see some recent photos. Photo WiFi allowed me to transfer every easily all my photos to the iPhone X and my iPad. Kudos to the developers and thank you.
Keivanesmaili
One of the best app for upload and download iPhone pictures. I love it. ✨?
-Dab-
When I turned on the web page, it displayed some weird characters and it didn’t work. I’m so confused
OkayOK
This app is not working for me. I have wasted about an hour of my day trying to wirelessly download images to my computer from my phone. It is trying to download all my images as .HEIC files instead of .jpg. There is no customer support to link to or click on. There is also no “help”. You’re just on your own with a very useless video that shows you what to do without any mention of troubleshooting or support. I’m going to go back to email in them to myself because that would have been faster.
Iamsavedru
My old iPhone software would not allow the iPhone to upload into iTunes any longer. Matter of fact some of the pictures once in the cloud were no longer there! Needless to say I was panicking and at a loss for what to do. But I googled and read a review on this software and decided to give it a try, after all I had about 3000 pics and videos to save. Well It worked perfectly and quickly too! This software is awesome!!!! Thank you so much for creating this program!
Doug Downing
This app requires a WiFi network to pass photos between devices but doesn’t actually use the Internet. Even better, you can use your phone’s Personal Hotspot feature (if enabled) to establish the WiFi connection, and no cellular data will be used. NOTE: This may not work with some public WiFi networks, such as at Starbucks. This seems to be a common limitation. You can browse using most of the Albums in iOS Photos, but it doesn’t display Moments. (Favorites and other smart albums are also missing, but Camera Roll and My Photo Stream are available.) Quite conveniently, selections remain intact after transfer, which means you can re-edit a photo and then resend it very easily, without having to reselect. (This is useful if you like to create a lot of variations.) If you’re working with edited photos, it only transfers the displayed image (e.g., JPEG or PNG), not the original photo. File names typically match those used by the iCloud Photo Library (e.g., IMG_2475.JPG or OriginalPhoto-546287389.18346.jpg). All in all, this is a great tool, given that it’s completely free, with no in-app purchases. It’d be nice to have an option to transfer the original image or all files associated with an image (JPEG, DNG, AAE, MOV). Finding images can also be tricky, as thumbnails are small and cropped, and favorites are not indicated—but you can use Photos concurrently with this app to help in the selection process. It’d be nice to have access to Moments and Favorites, etc., or the ability to preview at a larger size. It’d also be beneficial to be able to connect via USB cable, rather than just WiFi network. To the developer: It would be seriously great if you could integrate this app into the Sharing options for iOS Photos, à la AirDrop or Dropbox. This would bypass many of the current selection issues. Why I needed this: I have an older computer running Mac OSX El Capitan, and the default applications (Image Capture and Photos) both created significant problems in the Photos app of my up-to-date iPhone. It’s sad. The new features or systems used by the latest iOS aren’t parseable by these older Mac OS utilities, and my Mac was basically destroying the edited images on my phone during import. I had to find a workaround.