
On the import side, you can now save files directly from the company’s Outlook.com cloud mail service, and Windows users on either editions 7 and 8 (but not 9, natch) will now be able to back up photos that are received from non OneDrive devices, along with screenshots, which can now be automatically backed up.
Also out in the day’s updates is the ability to create albums — groups of your photos that are shareable, unsurprisingly — and the ability to better manage photos that you have tagged. Albums is rolling out first to iOS, and later to Android and Windows Phone. Yes, you can expect the usual griping from Windows Phone users.
More importantly, however, is the new search features that OneDrive introduced. In partnership with Bing — which Microsoft is still not selling — the the company has built in the ability to, and I quote, “search for Office documents and PDFs by text inside of them and photos based on time, location, or text that is extracted from images themselves.” Whatever you took a picture of, you can search for it.
OneDrive has an important home inside of Windows 10 — Microsoft’s cloud play is not a product aimed at the few. The above puts it into feature competition with other cloud providers when it comes to offering a decent photo environment. Whether that work boosts engagement is the next question.
Microsoft, how about some new usage and storage metrics?