![]() I have contacted support twice and had very prompt and helpful replies. There are a lot of features I haven’t yet used but so far it seems to be a well-conceived and well-built product. By the way external, NAS, and cloud drives don’t count against your device limit. So I use their Premium plan which is $100 per year for up to 5 devices and 100,000 pictures. The free version does not come with the Lightroom integration or the ability to import RAW files. It is free for users with less than 25,000 pictures and with up to three devices to keep in sync. Mylio has apps for Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows. (Note that I do have to tell Lightroom to reread the metafiles to get the data into the Lightroom catalog.) For example, if I am somewhere where I don’t have internet connectivity I can be keywording my images using Mylio on my iPad and then when I am back in internet land my device will update the keywords in the Lightroom XMP metafiles on my main computer. The integration with Lightroom is also a two-way street. ![]() The professional photographer who introduced me to Mylio has 1,000,000 pictures in Mylio and he has previews of all of them on his phone. The result is that I have access to a version of all of my pictures even without the internet. More than enough to get a good image on that particular screen but small enough to hold lots of pictures. My iPad and laptop get medium size previews and my iPhone gets small thumbnails. In my case, I have the originals on my main machine and sync them to my onsite and offsite backups. Mylio can also be used to ensure that you have copies on external drives and/or cloud services so that you always have the number of onsite, offsite, and cloud backups you define. ) No more exporting and no more importing. (The sync takes place when the internet is available and the devices are running the Mylio app. It also monitors my Lightroom folders so as soon as I add or change an image in Lightroom it gets synced onto my devices. However, the brilliant aspect of Mylio, for me, is that it looks after ensuring that all of my devices have synced copies of all of my photos. It would appear to have many of the same editing capabilities as Photos but I haven’t used either as an editor so can’t talk to those features. I was recently introduced to a product called Mylio. If I re-edited a picture in Lightroom then the export/import process needed to be done again. So my workflow became a process whereby all of my images went into Lightroom and then after they had been culled and processed some of the ‘keepers’ would be exported as JPEGs and imported into iCloud Photos and then become available on my devices. The second obstacle was that I enjoyed working in Lightroom and wanted to continue to use it as my editor. I don’t want them all in the cloud at that point in my workflow as it would be incredibly slow and, in many locations, impossible. When I am travelling I might take 3 – 4 thousand pictures each of which is a 50 Meg RAW file. When Photos was announced a few years ago I felt it would be the solution to the issue of distributing my images to all of my devices. ![]() Both Apple and Adobe have products which address this but the developers who write these programs seem to feel that everyone has very high speed internet at all times and oodles of cloud storage. One of the problems I had, and the reason for this review, was to find a product which allowed me to see all of my pictures on all of my devices. I am an amateur photographer and enjoy travelling and taking pictures, lots of pictures.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |