![]() > few months to upload pictures to the cloud. I have it running on my Synology NAS, and used it for But I also introduced a 'headless' mode, so you can run it on a > menu bar, like the Google Drive app, and just uploads/downloads photos to ![]() > It was primarily designed for running on a Mac desktop (it sits in the You may be interested in the little app I put 10:23 GMT+01:00 Mark Otway Just seen this thread. Is there any chance to run GooglePhotoSync on a standard Linux-ARM box? Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub You are receiving this because you commented. (at least until Amazon bring their intelligent search, aka Family Vault, to Unlimited Amazon Cloud storage for proper backup (via rclone) and then haveĪ low-res copy in GPhotos to take advantage of their advanced image search Plan to make it an option to upload at the 16MP setting (which is free andĭoesn't count against your quota) - the idea being that I'll use my The app currently uploads at full res but once I remember the setting I I have it running on my Synology NAS, and used it for aįew months to upload pictures to the cloud. But I also introduced a 'headless' mode, so you can run it on aīox without a GUI. Menu bar, like the Google Drive app, and just uploads/downloads photos to It was primarily designed for running on a Mac desktop (it sits in the Perhaps a neat solution would be to see if there's an API for 'Recover Storage' - you could then run rclone to upload to Gdrive, and then automatically trigger a 'recover storage' process once it's uploaded. I did this earlier this week (having moved all my full-res images to Amazon Drive) and it resized 1.2TB of images (around 200k x 5MB-9MB images) in about 36 hours. However, you could periodically click the 'Recover storage' option after doing this, and it'll resize them for you. As has been mentioned, uploading to GDrive and then making the pictures available in GPhotos will not upload them as 'free' resolution.Despite uploading all photos into named, organised folders (albums) into GPhotos, if you make them available through GDrive they just appear in month/year folders, which is really annoying.You could also run leocrawford's excellent sync tool, which would work too.Īs has been discussed, the 'two-way' sync between drive and GPhotos is massively limited: The app currently uploads at full res but once I remember the setting I plan to make it an option to upload at the 16MP setting (which is free and doesn't count against your quota) - the idea being that I'll use my unlimited Amazon Cloud storage for proper backup (via rclone) and then have a low-res copy in GPhotos to take advantage of their advanced image search (at least until Amazon bring their intelligent search, aka Family Vault, to the UK). I have it running on my Synology NAS, and used it for a few months to upload pictures to the cloud. But I also introduced a 'headless' mode, so you can run it on a box without a GUI. It was primarily designed for running on a Mac desktop (it sits in the menu bar, like the Google Drive app, and just uploads/downloads photos to GPhotos. You may be interested in the little app I put together to solve this: You can access your Picasa photos only via the Album Archive page.Īre you still using Picasa for local photo management? Let us know in the comments below.Just seen this thread. Google ended all online interactions for Picasa in 2018. If you try to upload your Picasa photos to Google Photos, you’ll get an alert that says the app could not authenticate your account. However, you can’t create new albums or edit existing ones. You can view, download or delete your Picasa Web Albums. All your photos are available on the album archive page. You can still access your Picasa photos via the Web Albums website. If you deleted the Picasa app from your computer, and you don’t want to use Google Photos, all is not lost. Go to Automatic updates and then select Don’t check for updates. Go to Tools, select Options, and then go to General. Some Picasa users suggested that disabling automatic updates might solve the problem. That’s intended behavior as Google ended Picasa’s ability to interact online back in 2018. If you try to sign in to your Google account or upload your photos to Google Photos while in Picasa, the app will alert it could not authenticate your account. This means that you can’t link the two services. However, the connection with Google Photos has been disabled. ![]() The good news is that you can still use the desktop app on your computer for local photo management. What to Do if Picasa Can’t Authenticate Your Account
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