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I built an app to backup Live Photos from iPhone to external hard drives

I noticed so many iPhone users are dealing with the same storage nightmare. Here's a common scenario that sounds familiar to a lot of people:

The widespread problem: iPhone storage fills up crazy fast, not everyone has a Mac, many don't want to pay monthly for iCloud storage, and home NAS setups aren't realistic for most users. The manual approach of creating folders and selecting photos one by one is tedious, and keeping up with new photos becomes overwhelming

So I built an app called BackiGo that addresses this exact pain point - it allows direct backup of Live Photos from iPhone to external hard drives, no Mac needed.

What makes it useful:

Backs up your Live Photos with all the motion intact

Can restore Live Photos back to your iPhone camera roll

Super easy to backup new photos

You can browse and view all your saved Live Photos directly from the external drive without having to restore them first

You can test it out with up to 500 photos & videos backup before deciding if it works for your needs

Where is the link? How can iPhone backup directly to an external hard drive?

3 days agogerdemb

Plug it in to the USB port on the phone. iPhone Pro can transfer at up to 20 Gbps but the non-pro models are much slower.

The iPhone camera can also shoot directly to an attached SSD.

2 days agocriddell

> iPhone Pro can transfer at up to 20 Gbps

Citation/proof strongly needed on 20 Gbps

2 days agodiscostrings

Right you are. I was going off my (bad) memory. It’s a 10 Gbps port.

2 days agocriddell

I have bad news for you, that's not a real iPhone

2 days agosupportengineer

>home NAS setups aren't realistic for most users

Citation needed. Get a Synology NAS and use their Photos app which backups Live photos on both iDevices and Androids. Buy it for life.

2 days agogaudat

Let's be real, that's already far less approachable to 90% of consumers I know.

The simples hurdle just being knowledge.

The existence of NAS is probably an unknown unkown to a large part of the population.

Compare that to "there's an app for that" & plug USB.

Drastically simpler.

No skin in the game either way, but I can very much understand OPs reasoning and would reach the same conclusion.

2 days agothenaturalist

I've been doing this for many years and am pretty happy with it. I can sync from my Android and my wife's iPhone. The Photos app is nice and smooth. Backups happen automatically in the background. It can even de-dupe and clean up old photos that have been backed up. All in all, quite pleased with it.

2 days agopdxandi

You’re looking at £300ish for an entry level Synology and the storage. That isn’t a realistic expense for many users.

2 days agoHuwFulcher

Over time it saves money. I got a home server and a tiny remote backup server 8 years ago and it runs quite a few services saving me hundreds each month and costing in electricity and hardware (over time) about 15EUR/mo. The longer it runs, the cheaper it is. Most of the updates are automatic so no babysitting required.

19 hours agoJnr

A Synology NAS doesn’t last for life.

a day agomichaelraiwet

And isn't protection against fire, flood, theft or other disasters.

a day agouuddlrlrbaba

I wouldn't use it personally, but I could see it being useful for my parents or family.

ifuse and rsync works fine for me.

2 days agojlarocco

I would love this if it allowed me to backup all photos taken with the iPhone to an external drive. Currently, Apple dumps all pictures (from the Camera, from iMessage, WhatsApp, etc.) into folder makes it difficult to backup just my pictures.

2 days agoSwamyM

I am using PhotoSync to backup photos from iPhone to a self-hosted Photoprism via WebDAV (accessible from everywhere via tailscale).

a day agoatmosx

Thank you for including a non subscription “lifetime” payment option.

2 days agopolymatter
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2 days ago

Can you add a feature to upload to a ftp server?

5 hours agoscriu

Would immich work for this? You can run it locally in docker container

2 days agomindwork

Will it work with large (huge) photos libraries? Eg. 150k photos/videos - most of them in iCloud. Does it preserve album/folder structure?

2 days agomfa1999

Btw, there is also LocalSend. Pretty nifty app

20 hours agomattfrommars

Isn't that to transfer wirelessly to devices?

6 hours agocoldtrait

Is this a native IOS app?

20 hours agomattfrommars

How much does it cost?

2 days agokeroro

In-App Purchases

BackiGo Pro Yearly (1 Year) $6.99

BackiGo Pro Monthly (1 Month) $0.99

BackiGo Pro Lifetime $14.99

2 days agorecury

[dead]

2 days agoalain34

I just use rsync, works great

2 days agoer0k

Would you explain how you are using rsync to backup photos on an iPhone ?

I'm not aware of an iOS app named "rsync" and ... presumably you don't have a shell ... ?

2 days agorsync

You can load the IPhone’s pictures on Linux using the folders namespace and then rsync from the loaded namespace to /local…

2 days agoslicktux

But does it work for Live Photos which is the main premise of this app?

2 days agotrinix912

I use a usb cable and a Linux laptop to copy to a couple of external hard drives (which I store separately). It’s all manual but not too orrenous although i ought backup more often. The biggest hassle is accessing the new heic format on pretty much everything.

Could it all be made into a sd card image for a pi zero perhaps? Even with a web ui accessible over Wi-Fi? A basic cheap sync-cable-appliance that non-techies can easily use?

2 days agowood_spirit

I think I heard that the latest 'rclone' now, finally, support iCloud ... but I think there is an issue there because you can't sync full quality / RAW photos to icloud, can you ?

2 days agorsync