Have you ever tried scrolling through your Facebook timeline looking for a certain photo? It’s a mess! Mylio took about 6 minutes to import over 2000 photos from my Facebook account and organize them all into folders by Year and Month. Next, they had me start off by importing all the photos from my Facebook account. Here’s one that shows the basic functionality of Mylio. Right off the bat, Mylio directs you to some easy to follow, short tutorial videos. I have an Android phone and tablet (which will be compatible with Mylio very soon, stay tuned) and various external and back up hard drives that will need to be included in my library. Using Mylio you can view and edit your photos on a desktop PC, Mac, iPhone or iPad. The folks at Mylio have given me an advanced account to try for a year so I’m going for all the features!Īfter I went back to the home screen and signed in, I get a prompt to load Mylio onto my other devices. There are various tiers, including a free trial. Then I received an email link right away, which led me to the page where you can choose which subscription option you would like. Easy peasy.Īfter opening the application, I was prompted to enter my email address and create a password. When I double clicked on the zipped file, I was instructed to drag the Mylio icon to my applications folder. I just went to, clicked on “Get Mylio” and it downloaded within seconds. We need to support other options in the world of photography.Ĭlick Here for Your Free copy of Mylio, Free for life.Mylio was super easy to download and install. Check these guys out and give them a try. And did I mention Mylio is FREE? As long as you only shoot JPEGs, you don’t have more than 25,000 images, and you don’t need them on more than three devices, there is no charge. Not everyone is so fortunate, but before JP was assigned to my digital chaos, I often spoke to either Matt or Raiza who are also superb. Admittedly, due to my “test dummy” status with Mylio, I have a direct line to the Crazy Canadian, JP. No other program can do this, and more than once I’ve sent images out to an editor when my office was no closer than thousands of miles away.Īnd I haven’t even mentioned the support staff that everybody has access to. It has the ability for me to have all my images on all devices, which in my life includes my Mac Pro, MacBook Pro, my office assistant Jill’s iMac, Tanya’s MacBook Air, my iPad and iPhone and a Mac Mini at our home for backup. It can handle my 800,000+ image library like I’ve only dreamed about with Aperture and Lightroom. What’s so unique about Mylio NOW is its phenomenal speed. Matt, Raiza, and Neo in the Mylio Suppor Center solving the world’s Mylio problems one call at a time. Once it gets into the library it’s even worse since neither program has the ability to find anything with more than one copy. Mylio’s coming new Duplicate Finder is going to be a game changing technology that many of my students have been wishing for, and Mylio is going to be the first to have it. As long as I’m renaming the files, as I always do, neither Lightroom or Aperture will detect it. Where this is most typically an issue is if I get busy loading cards and I inadvertently try to reimport a card that I already loaded. Many of you know that I rename all my images on Import so as far as the programs can tell, every image is something new. When I was using Aperture and now Lightroom, the only way either of these programs can detect duplicates is if the name of the image is exactly the same. What was so impressive is the duplicate finder’s ability to find replication based on actual pixels and other metadata. David Vaskevitch, CEO of Mylio, in front of a wall of his photography-just a few from his half million Mylio library-at Mylio headquarters in Seattle, Washington.Īs just one example, today JP showed me a behind the scenes Duplicate Finder tool that will be coming in a future release.
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