![]() It was originally suggested that Capture One reference the Mylio folder, and that Mylio creates a ‘Watch’ on the Capture One Catalog in order to update the files in the Mylio Library. This will create a new 620 GB folder, leaving the original Aperture folder intact and no longer accessed. Mylio requires the ‘duplication’ of the originals from the Aperture referenced library. Having reviewed Mylio’s description of ‘edits’ that are carried over from Aperture, I am waiting for further clarification from them. Mylio customer support has been excellent. I am trying to determine if there can be an effective and efficient workflow combining Mylio and Capture One. And, if you do decide to start working with us, you can count on our support when you need it. ![]() That is why we went the extra mile to work around the limitations of the Apple SDK and develop our own mechanisms to bring all your work across. Most importantly, for the Aperture community, we imagined how it must feel to have thousands of pictures and face losing all your adjustments and metadata in the process of moving to a new environment. So, if you see this missing, know that it is coming. A few features also coming soon round this out including brushes (yes), and presets which can be applied against sets of images and also applied at import time. Today we have all the global adjustments. Building a comlete suite of tools takes time. ![]() We built our own raw stack doing a good job with your pictures is important to you and to us. For example, I am writing while travelling with almost non-existent internet connections and yet replication still works completely and is very fast. Uniquely all of this works both with and without the cloud. The same replication engine allows you to automate the process of protecting your pictures. In addition to allow you to work with and organize pictures on a single machine, it also replicates your pictures across all your machines so you can work wherever you are. Today we support IOS but Android is in beta and will become available soon. It provides many of the same features as Aperture and Lightroom but also reaches into new territory including the ability to work on computers (Mac and Windows) and devices – phones and tablets. I am the founder and wanted to take a moment to provide a quick overview of where we fit in. We at Mylio want to be of service to the Aperture community. ![]() We have world-class support too (all of our support team are former Apple Geniuses), so please don’t hesitate to reach out to with any questions. We’d love to get feedback from any of you who try the product, and we offer a 30 day free trial at. Even if you intend to use Lightroom, Mylio’s interop with Lightroom (and Photoshop) make it a more complete solution than importing into Lightroom alone. There are three useful locations on the Mylio site to learn more about how the import works:ġ - Covers basic Importing from Aperture to Mylio.Ģ - Provides a comprehensive list of Aperture features and how they convert to Mylio.Īpple made it impossible to move 100% of the features, but Mylio now offers the most complete Aperture migration path available anywhere. With the Aperture release, it is as simple as clicking on Import Aperture Files. The original way to export to Mylio was clunky and required you export and import. It has been in beta (available to anyone who currently uses Mylio for about a month and is about to be released).īased on some of the comments here, it is clear that an old FAQ file was not removed. It is the first tool I have seen that actually brings in your edits, crops, etc. As an Aperture user since beta, I can tell you first-hand that the Aperture import is nothing short of a godsend to Aperture fans looking for an alternative platform. Full disclosure, I have since joined the company. Hi – I wrote The Official Guide to Mylio, I wrote this independently from the company after I fell in love with the early beta releases.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |