Got an iOS tip of your own? Need help troubleshooting your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad? Drop me a line or leave a comment below. To put it back on your Mac, simply do the same steps above, and then point iPhoto to the new location on your Hard Drive. Open a Finder window and select Pictures in the sidebar, then copy the Photos Library or iPhoto Library file or files to an external drive. It might take a couple of seconds for iPhoto to figure this out, but once it’s all done, you’ll be able to open iPhoto as per usual in the future, without having to choose the library again. In the Photos app, select Photos > Preferences > iCloud and select the iCloud Photos box, then select Download Originals to this Mac. Hit the Choose button to complete the process. If not, click on Other Library and navigate to the spot on your external hard drive that you put the iPhoto Library from the steps above. If you see the one you moved in the list, click on it. iPhoto will display a list of currently installed iPhoto Libraries. Hold the Option key down and launch iPhoto, either with a double click on the Application in the Applications folder or a click on the icon in the Dock, if you keep iPhoto there. Next up, you just have to tell iPhoto where the Library is. This could take some time, depending on how many photos and/or videos you have in there. If you choose to cut/paste the file, paste it onto the external hard drive. Move the selected package file with Cut from the Edit menu, or drag and drop it to an external hard drive. Find the iPhoto Library package, and click once on it to select it. Then, open your home folder, then the Pictures folder within. Be sure you have the external hard drive you want to put your iPhoto Library and files on is connected. The first thing to do is to move the iPhoto Library itself.
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