Download _TOP_ Swift Backup

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Felicia Lehoullier

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Jan 20, 2024, 3:56:54 PM1/20/24
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This is completely up to you. Most apps work fine when restored with 'APKs' and 'Data'. It can take some trial and error in finding which parts need to be selected for backup/restore of apps you specifically use. Each app part is briefly explained below.

If you don't have root access, the only practical option to backup the private app data is to use backup solutions that shipped with your device (if any) or to use Google backup if your device has Google Play services, etc.

download swift backup


Download Zip - https://t.co/P9i4z9pa7q



To delete your app backups, open Swift Backup and click on the 'Apps' icon in the top card to enter the Apps screen. You can perform all sorts of apps related actions in this screen, so make sure you familiarize yourself with this screen.

To delete multiple backups: Click on the 'Batch actions' button at the bottom and select the Delete backups action. Now select the apps in the list and perform the 'Delete backups' action for the selected apps. If you wish to delete only the archived app backups, select the 'Delete archived backups only' action instead.

To delete backups of a specific app: Click on the app item from the list in the Apps screen. In the resulting screen, click on the 3-dot menu in the Device backup card or the Cloud backup card and select 'Delete backup' action.

For Google Sign-in users: Encryption passwords are generated on a per-user and per-backup type basis and are not stored anywhere. Note that your Google account email id is NOT used to generate the passwords. When you sign-in with Google in Swift Backup for the first time, you are creating a Swift Backup specific account which has its own randomly generated user id. This user id is one of the factors that is used to generate the keys.

Can I use my own passphrase for encrypting backups?
Yes, you need to select the 'Advanced' password strategy under Settings > Encryption password strategy and add your own passphrase. This passphrase will be used along with the already used parameters in the default Standard strategy to generate the final password for the backup. Note that Swift Backup won't be able to decrypt/restore your backups if you forget this passphrase.

Breakdown of the above command
am start -n org.swiftapps.swiftbackup/.shortcuts.ShortcutsActivity
This just starts the activity that handles the command. '-n' is very important!

How do I backup my cloud setup settings for WebDAV, SMB, SFTP, etc?
You can export/import your cloud setup settings to a plain-text json file to a location you prefer using the 3-dot menu in 'Cloud sync' screen (it's just beside the 'Home' tab in the app) or from the 3-dot menu in the cloud setup screen itself where you can also import a settings from a saved file.

There are no plans to add a separate Contacts backup feature. However, if you are rooted, you can backup data of the Contacts Storage system app and then restore it after you switch ROMs or perform a factory reset. Ideally, we recommend to keep your contacts in your cloud using other more-or-less real-time sync solution.

Upon completion of your account deletion, all data that is associated with your account including information received by us when you used Google Sign-in with Swift Backup, your synced Swift Backup Settings and your cloud backup metadata, etc. is fully deleted.

I didn't see it on here and this hasn't always been true. Swift Backup is a way to backup/sync all of your android applications and the general stuff like wallpapper, wifi profiles and call logs. It's all done in a very refined interface. It's really robust as you can select what exactly you want each app to backup (cache, data, external) and you have the option to sync and backup from both on your phone AND to a small list of cloud services. I saw they now had support for NextCloud and it works great.

Pretty significant update to Swift Backup - a comprehensive app and data backup solution on Android (and alternative to Titanium Backup) - just got released. Version 3.7 not only adds Android 12 support but also uses Shizuku to perform many batch actions without needing root.

I personally can't wait for the day when Android has a complete app data backup solution. I know the security reasons why Google lets developers opt out of backups, but it's such a PITA setting up a new phone (at least when switching OEMs.) It's taken me hours to set up my Pixel 6 Pro.

Swift Backup is a data backup and recovery app that lets you make backup copies of almost everything on your Android. This means that you can recover text messages, call history, bookmarks, contacts, backgrounds and apps.

When you create a backup of an app, you can save its APK in your Android's memory. Then, you can share this APK or do anything you like with it. In terms of text messages or call history, all you have to do to restore the information is to use the 'restore' function in the Swift Backup app. Like this, you can also see and recover any apps you had downloaded, the different backgrounds that you'd been using and the contacts in your contact list.

Step #2 will remove the original store from the Core Data stack-- which is why you create a second stack in step #1. This way you can use the second stack to make the backup without affecting the one your app is using.

This is a little bit tricky because your app may be using its persistent store, but now you want to replace that with an older version. Before restoring from a backup, make sure you're not currently using any managed objects from the persistent store. Deallocate your NSPersistentContainer. Unload any UI that makes use of managed objects. Get your app into a state where all it can do is either restore from a backup or go back to using the current data, but where it's not showing any data except the backup list.

Over the course of Swift's numerous shows, she has brought plenty of special guests onstage, but her backup dancers and vocalists are a constant every night. They work hard to put on three-and-a-half-hour concerts for multiple days in a row, and they will continue to do so as Swift resumes the Eras Tour on November 9 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The dancers and singers deserve as much recognition as Swift herself for their work in Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour because, without them, it likely wouldn't be as much of a success as it is.

Throughout the nine eras (RIP Taylor Swift) in Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, the singer's backup dancers appear in different capacities to support her and ensure the entire production runs smoothly. Swift has 14 dancers in her rotation for her worldwide concert tour, and they all serve different roles over the course of the three-and-a-half-hour shows. Some worked one-on-one with Swift herself, while others functioned as a group to back up the performer during multiple sets.

Tori Evans currently works as one of Taylor Swift's backup dancers for the Eras Tour. But before her time with the artist, Evans studied dance at the University of Arizona in Tucson, then, of course, moved to Los Angeles to follow her dream. The dancer has performed with various artists, including Empire of the Sun, Ricky Martin, Cardi B, Jason Derulo, Beyoncé, Maroon 5, and Tyga. Evans has also starred in television series such as The Masked Singer, The Kelly Clarkson Show, and The Price Is Right.

Like many other dancers seen in Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, Whyley Keolaokalani Yoshimura is performing alongside Taylor Swift for the first time in 2023. Yoshimura is from Hawai'i and has worked with numerous talented singers and performers since he decided to follow his passion. He has been a backup dancer for Rihanna, Jennifer Lopez, Chris Brown, Christina Aguilera, Nicki Minaj, Justin Bieber, and more.

As one appears to do while trying to achieve a dance career, Taylor Banks moved from the Midwest to Los Angeles following high school, where she soon gained recognition for her abilities. Most recently, Banks is a backup dancer for Taylor Swift on the Eras Tour, as depicted in Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, but she has worked with various artists. Banks has performed alongside Jennifer Lopez, Justin Timberlake, Billie Eilish, Mariah Carey, Ciara, Cher, Mario, Dua Lipa, Muse, and Carrie Underwood.

Sydney Moss made the move to Los Angeles in 2016, and her dancing career has flourished ever since. Moss is currently working as a backup dancer for Taylor Swift and the Eras Tour, but before joining one of the biggest concert tours of all time, she performed alongside Janet Jackson and Jennifer Lopez. Moss also teaches dance at the Radix Dance Convention and Jump Dance Convention.

Sam McWilliams is only 19 years old, but Taylor Swift has a knack for spotting talent regardless of age. Plus, the backup dancer already had a few credits under his name before he signed on to perform in the Eras Tour. McWilliams worked with Bebe Rexha and Meghan Trainor and appeared on So You Think You Can Dance? and the American Music Awards.

Audrey Douglass is one of the 14 backup dancers who star in Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, but it is not her first time appearing onscreen. Before Taylor Swift hired her, Douglass worked as a dancer on television shows and films such as Glee, Parks and Recreation, La La Land, Ellen, the Grammys, and more. She also used to be a Rockette in New York City.

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