I know you can do this with Drive and they used to have Drive-Photos integration before nixing that. It would be nice to have a backup of everything in case I were ever to migrate out of Google Photos
The camera roll on your device only backups to Microsoft OneDrive - it does not sync photos both ways. That means you can delete backed up photos and videos from your device, and the copies in OneDrive won't be affected.
If your camera backup is taking too long to set up or look for photos, without giving any error message, it could be because you have too many photos in your camera roll, or that you are out of storage space. Read What does it mean when your OneDrive account is frozen?
The functionality I am looking for is to simply backup my android to my pc and when I delete a file from my phone it should not be deleted from the pc and if I delete any file from the pc it should not delete on the phone as well.
Syncthing would not delete anything if its set to send only, perhaps some other process did that. You should open the web ui on the phone and verify the folder is actually visible as send only (should be a line in the box representing the folder). Perhaps there is a bug between the android ui and the syncthing application.
Thanks for the info, I tried both photo+ And PhotoSync. Photosync is good for backing up photos to storji and photoplus is similar to google photo where photos are backed up and be able to browse. But for some reason the transfer speed of photoplus is much slower and photoplus is not very stable and as user friendly, so might wait for a few revision
From time to time Dropbox asks me if I want to set up an automatic backup. I usually refuse. When Dropbox asked me recently, I was distracted and accidentally confirmed. Since then I have had the problem that my Dropbox is full and nothing syncs anymore. It is unclear what the remaining 7.56 GB of storage space is filled with as it doesn't show any more data in my Dropbox folder.
When I look in Photos (new), I see photos that are in my Apple Photos library, which is almost 100 GB in size. So I get the impression that Dropbox is trying to sync this entire library, possibly because it resides in my Pictures folder and probably that was included in the initial automated backup. Obviously it never finished that backup.
According your description, Dropbox' Backup isn't turned off, despite your impression. Did you try turn backup off according to "Turn off computer backup" section in pointed topic. If not, try out and on point 6 there select "Keep content in folders on this PC/Mac", not "Leave content in Dropbox".
All folders you have selected for backup are moved already into Dropbox folder. On their initial places are only aliases! Take care when you delete something; this thing gets deleted locally too. You can lost valuable data in such a way!
The folder you labeled "Photos (new)" is virtual folder accumulating all pictures/photos residing somewhere within your account. This folder doesn't match to exactly one real folder while all your pictures aren't residing on the same place/folder. Similar virtual folders are those representing pictures, documents, audio, etc. in your mobile phone, for example.
I'm glad to announce my problem has been solved this morning. Because Dropbox didn't sync anymore, I decided to move my main documents folder (around 5 GB) to the Onedrive I got with our Office365 Family account. Because I always used Dropbox, I never looked at that medium.
As soon as I had moved those 5 GB, my Dropbox was suddenly cleared of the unfinished backup/sync, meaning my Dropbox was nearly empty and the approx. 8 GB that had somehow disappeared were freed again as well. The virtual Photo's (new) folder doesn't display any pics any more either.
A lot of users like you have ever encountered Google photos backup stuck problem when you are making use of Google photos backup app, either the former Google Photos Backup or the very latest upgraded Backup and Sync. Especially when using Backup and Sync to sync a lot of local photos to Google drive cloud, people are probably get information like "Backing up 1 of XXX" or "Waiting for Sync" but it does not change for hours or even days. In the initial period of time, most users choose to wait it to finish its task. However, after even days of uploading, the number of the current backing up photos is still the same and does not change at all. Then, some users have lost their patience and want to turn off auto backup Google photos.
In addition to quitting or pausing Backup and Sync, to turn off Google photos backup, you can also achieve it by disconnecting your Google account from Backup and Sync. Once the account is disconnected from the app, its related task including photos sync will also be terminated.
If there is no target files to deal with, the Backup and Sync will stop working. Thus, we can uncheck all folders setup to back up from local to cloud and all items choose to sync from cloud to local to stop Google Drive from syncing. This is easy to specify in the "Preferences" settings window.
If you are using Google Photos app (a windmill shape with red, blue, green and yellow four different colors) on your mobile phone or tablet, you can stop Google photos auto backup by several ways below.
No matter what kind of device you are using and no matter what operating system you are running, you can stop Google Drive syncing through uninstalling Backup and Sync application. There are several methods to remove the software from your machine: you can uninstall it in Control Panel/in Windows Settings/through your antivirus service or other ways. Anyhow, as long as Backup and Sync is uninstalled, it will stop Google Drive from uploading immediately as you wish.
Uploading photos from local devices to cloud drives is an online task and need to rely on network supply. Therefore, if you cut off the Internet connection of your machine, it can also stop Google Photos from backing up.
If your computer stucks while you are trying to take operations to Backup and Sync, and there is no important document data being saved, you can just shut down your machine to stop Google photos backup.
When you finally and successfully manage to terminate Google photos backup, you may want to find an alternative to the software because you can't stand its problems anymore. Then, MultCloud should be recommended to you for its suitable functions.
MultCloud is a FREE web-based service that can manage multiple cloud drive accounts added to its platform without installing desktop app. It not only enables you to upload from local to cloud, download from cloud to local, but also directly sync files/photos among clouds in one platform without shiftting account from one to another and relying on local computer as transit.
Currently, MultCloud supports more than 30 cloud drives including Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive, G Suite, Flickr, Google Photos, etc. If you want to move photos from Google Drive to Google Photos without downloading and uploading, you can make full use of "Cloud Transfer".
Cloud storage solves the problems associated with physical devices. Depending on the service, you get several terabytes of space, syncing files is seamless, and you can access your files even if you get a new Android phone. These advantages apply to Google Photos, a gallery app that lets you back up pictures to your Google Cloud storage.
You can set Google Photos to automatically backup new images as they enter your gallery, and we show you how. You can also opt for manual syncing, which lets you choose the photos to back up to avoid eating away at your cloud storage. We outline the steps for turning on automatic and manual image syncing with Google Photos.
Google Photos may not start backing up files until you're connected to a Wi-Fi network. To back up over a cellular network, tap Use data. To set the backup quality or allow backing up over mobile data, tap the settings cog in the upper-right corner of the Backup page.
The system for creating backups isn't perfect. For example, you may accidentally lose your internet connection, have app interruptions, or select the wrong photos or albums. Always review your backups after they're uploaded, which you can do on any web browser after you log in to that Google account.
There are affordable subscription fees if you prefer not to deal with smaller storage limits (ranging from 200GB to 2TB) billed monthly or annually. If the paid extra space is a bit too much, you can always activate family sharing for others to back up photos in your household.
I was on WiFi the whole time. There was less than one minute between the first and second picture. I don't see any indications that anything is uploading or that anything failed. I have looked in both the Google Photos app and the web site looking for anything to force a sync and haven't found anything except for "Back up all" which did nothing.
After I take a series of photos on my phone using its camera app, I switch over to the Google photos app, and inside that app I select one or more of the photos and create a shared album. That is not enough to sync to the cloud however. To force the phone to sync and upload all the files to cloud, you have to actually share it, or just click on the create link icon. In order for that to work, it forces the phone to have to upload all of the selected photos into Google photos. This works out just fine for me, because I usually want to get a share link to the items that I am taking a record of, anyway
In Google Photos app select Assistant and then you can choose (or view the current backup status/progress) to force backup photos. Be sure to set the different image maps to cloud: the folder will then contain a blue cloud icon with an arrow in it.
In Android 6 / Marshmallow, go to Settings -> Personal -> Google -> Google Photos Backup, and click Backup all, this started the backup straight away for me. There are lots of other options on that screen that may help, I found that somehow the Backup option at the top of the screen had been set to off.
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