https://imazing.com/backup-iphone-ipad#:~:text=Choose%20iPhone%20backup%20location
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
https://imazing.com/backup-iphone-ipad#:~:text=Choose%20iPhone%20backup%20location
BackiGo Pro Yearly (1 Year) $6.99
BackiGo Pro Monthly (1 Month) $0.99
BackiGo Pro Lifetime $14.99
I'm not aware of an iOS app named "rsync" and ... presumably you don't have a shell ... ?
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?
This project lets you download from the latter: https://github.com/icloud-photos-downloader/icloud_photos_downloader
https://pilabor.com/blog/2022/01/access-and-recover-files-from-an-iphone-on-linux/
Nowadays I'd use immich or ente.io, which has and e2e encryption cloud as well as self-hosted setup
Citation needed. Get a Synology NAS and use their Photos app which backups Live photos on both iDevices and Androids. Buy it for life.
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.
That's a nearly $1,000 investment with a $23/month ongoing cost for backups, not to mention the added administrative (time) costs... and the eventual need for new drives and hardware (more money).... along with with migration costs (more time).
I'm also an iCloud Photos user. I pay $2.99/month for extra storage to backup all my photos/videos to the cloud and never think about it or manage my on-device storage.
The initial sunk cost of investing in the NAS could pay for 27 years of iCloud drive space (at the current price I pay), and the ongoing cost of my NAS backup is over 7x the price of what I pay for iCloud on an ongoing basis.
If it's a question of money at all, it makes 0 financial sense to buy a NAS to solve a simple photo management issue on a cell phone.
Then there is the technical requirements. Step 1 is getting someone to understand what a NAS is, which is where you will already lose 80% of users.
I have no delusions that I will keep this Synology solution for life. At some point I will need to migrate, which means solving the current problems it solves again. The big question is if I will be doing it proactively or reactively. If it's reactive, I will very likely end up forced into another Synology product due to vendor lock-in, unless I take active steps to mitigate that risk. Most users don't want to think or care about any of this; I don't even want to think about this stuff, but it's often on my mind.
The big risk I'm taking right now with iCloud Photos is that I have no idea how redundant the solution on Apple's side is. I hope they are good stewards of the data, but I really don't know. It would be a PR nightmare if they lost a bunch of people's photos. I have been thinking about looking into creating a copy of my photos/videos stored in iCloud on my NAS, but that is more time, and will likely require some kind of ongoing maintenance. It will likely also push me over a threshold for my NAS backup, and require that price to go up. I'm not excited about any of those prospects, so I've been trusting Apple for now (and for the last several years).
These aren't thoughts of "most users", and I envy them.
ifuse and rsync works fine for me.
The iPhone camera can also shoot directly to an attached SSD.
Citation/proof strongly needed on 20 Gbps