Getting a grip on all that digital clutterĪs anyone who’s looked at their phone’s camera roll will tell you, all these photos make for an overwhelming level of digital clutter. Smartphones are the device of choice for casual photography and social media, while cameras, though continuing to decline in use, are finding a niche among professionals and amateurs who want to be sure to properly document special events like weddings. Of the three ways photos are taken – smart phones, tablets, and dedicated cameras – only smartphone photography is showing growth. The increase in digital photography is still driven by global mobile technology adoption, with many developing countries bypassing landlines entirely and going straight to mobile. One way to wrap our heads around these staggering numbers: if we printed each photo at the standard 4圆” then laid all 1.2 trillion end to end, they’d stretch from Earth to Mars more than three times. The flood of digital photos continues to rise: the 1.2 trillion photos expected to be taken in 2017 shows a 9% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) over 2016, while the 4.7 trillion expected to be stored reflects an eyebrow-raising 19% increase. Jess Lampe, Project Manager / Data Analyst at Mylio It's getting harder and harder to manage them." "These numbers confirm what a lot of people have been telling us. Produced with data from global digital imaging market research firm InfoTrends, the forecast predicts still more growth next year for the capture and storage of digital photos. ![]() Mylio, the photo organizing app that helps users easily manage hundreds of thousands of images, announces the release of its 2017 World Digital Photo Forecast.
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