Search engine giant Google has announced it is ‘moving on’ from to its photo editing, archiving and sharing service Picasa. Anil Sabharwal, Head of Google Photos said after much thought and consideration, they’ve decided to retire Picasa over the coming months in order to focus entirely on a single photo service in Google Photos.
“We believe we can create a much better experience by focusing on one service that provides more functionality and works across mobile and desktop, rather than divide our efforts across two different products,” Sabharwal said in a blog post.
“We know for many of you, a great deal of care has gone into managing your photos and videos using Picasa—including the hours you’ve invested and the most precious moments you’ve trusted us with. So we will take some time in order to do this right and provide you with options and easy ways to access your content.”
Google is suggesting that if you have photos or videos in a Picasa Web Album today, the easiest way to still access, modify and share most of that content is to log in to Google Photos, and all your photos and videos will already be there. Using Google Photos, you can continue to upload and organize your memories, as well as enjoy other great benefits like better ways to search and share your images.
Sabharwal added: “However, for those of you who don’t want to use Google Photos or who still want to be able to view specific content, such as tags, captions or comments, we will be creating a new place for you to access your Picasa Web Albums data. That way, you will still be able to view, download, or delete your Picasa Web Albums, you just won’t be able to create, organize or edit albums (you would now do this in Google Photos).”
One thing to make clear is that none of this is happening today—if you have a Picasa Web Album you can keep using it as normal. Google will start rolling out the changes on May 1, 2016.
Desktop application
As of March 15, 2016, Google will no longer be supporting the Picasa desktop application. For those who have already downloaded this—or choose to do so before this date—it will continue to work as it does today, but Google said they will not be developing it further, and there will be no future updates.
“If you choose to switch to Google Photos, you can continue to upload photos and videos using the desktop uploader at photos.google.com/apps. Finally for developers, we will also be retiring some functions of the Picasa API,” the Google head said.