![]() ![]() ![]() One downside is that that app adds “Uploaded via Reflections. The tag interface is really slick, giving you an alphabetical list of your tags (or, if you prefer, your most popular ones) from which you can easily pick one or several (you can also add new tags). ![]() Once a picture is uploaded, you can change the title, or add tags or comments to it from within the app. Library is also where you’ll find a camera button in the upper right corner, which allows you to upload full-size images to your Flickr account (one you take with the camera at the time, or one that you’ve already taken). There’s a Cache section in the preferences that shows how much space is being used on your iPhone, but the slider for setting the amount of cache doesn’t display cache size information (the developer says this is due to a limitation Apple puts on preferences located in Settings), and an Empty option that you can set to on or off doesn’t seem to empty the cache until you quit and relaunch the app. (You set the interval between slides in the app’s preferences, located under the iPhone’s Settings app-the only of the three apps reviewed here that make you leave the program to change its settings.) As with the other apps here, Reflections caches photos in order to speed up viewing, but your control over it is limited. Setting the Scene: On its Library screen, Reflections shows your photo sets as well as favorites and photostream.You can also display photos via a slideshow, where pictures transition automatically with the same swipe effect. ![]()
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