
Opinion: How about some love for Android phone users?
About a month ago, I wrote a column about a few ways to transfer photos from an iPhone to your computer.
Well as it happens, sometimes when I write about a specific topic, I often hear from readers who feel a bit left out.
One reader wrote, 'This week's column about moving pics from phone to PC was 100% iPhone-centric. What about us Android users? Don't you like us?' (He did include a laughing emoji.)
Actually, I've got no beef with Android phone users.
Sometimes when I get a specific question, I'll flesh out the answer in a column and by the time I'm done, I've written enough to fill the space I have. I have infinite space online, but these columns appear in newspapers as well, and editors expect them to be a specific length (within reason).
When I'm finished answering the question, I must decide if I have enough room left to expand on it to include 'the other side,' which might be Android users if I'm writing about iPhones or Mac users if I'm writing about Windows, or vice versa.
Now, getting back to the question, the best/fastest way to move photos from an Android phone to a computer would be with a USB cable.
Connect the phone to the computer via USB and the phone should appear as a storage device like a flash drive. You'll need to make sure the phone is unlocked or the computer won't find it.
When you connect them for the first time, watch the phone screen and/or the computer screen for pop-up messages about trusting the new device and allowing the transfer of data.
You can navigate the phone's storage to open the folder with the photos, or you can open the Photos app on the PC or Mac and import the photos from inside the app.
Another way to get pictures and videos from the phone to a computer is via cloud upload. If you use Google Photos or Microsoft OneDrive you can use your phone to upload your files to the cloud, then you can log into the same service on your computer to view and download them. – Tribune News Service

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Trump's vice president JD Vance shocked European leaders in February by accusing them - at a conference usually known for displays of transatlantic unity - of censoring free speech and failing to control immigration. In May, Secretary of State Marco Rubio threatened visa bans for people who 'censor' speech by Americans, including on social media, and suggested the policy could target foreign officials regulating U.S. tech companies. U.S. social media companies like Facebook and Instagram parent Meta have said the European Union's Digital Services Act amounts to censorship of their platforms. EU officials say the Act will make the online environment safer by compelling tech giants to tackle illegal content, including hate speech and child sexual abuse material. Greg Nojeim, director of the Security and Surveillance Project at the Center for Democracy & Technology, said Europeans' concerns about the U.S. government accessing their data, whether stored on devices or in the cloud, were justified. Not only does U.S. law permit the government to search devices of anyone entering the country, it can compel disclosure of data that Europeans outside the U.S. store or transmit through U.S. communications service providers, Nojeim said. MISSION IMPOSSIBLE? Germany's new government is itself making efforts to reduce exposure to U.S. tech, committing in its coalition agreement to make more use of open-source data formats and locally-based cloud infrastructure. Regional governments have gone further - in conservative-run Schleswig-Holstein, on the Danish border, all IT used by the public administration must run on open-source software. Berlin has also paid for Ukraine to access a satellite-internet network operated by France's Eutelsat instead of Musk's Starlink. But with modern life driven by technology, 'completely divorcing U.S. tech in a very fundamental way is, I would say, possibly not possible,' said Bill Budington of U.S. digital rights nonprofit the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Everything from push notifications to the content delivery networks powering many websites and how internet traffic is routed relies largely on U.S. companies and infrastructure, Budington noted. Both Ecosia and French-based search engine Qwant depend in part on search results provided by Google and Microsoft's Bing, while Ecosia runs on cloud platforms, some hosted by the very same tech giants it promises an escape from. Nevertheless, a group on messaging board Reddit called BuyFromEU has 211,000 members. 'Just cancelled my Dropbox and will switch to Proton Drive,' read one post. 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