![]() Well worth it in my books as I use it multiple times a day. Syncs all the photos into the iCloud account, and smartly organizes them. It can sync with iCloud and allows you to access your photos and artwork from anywhere. It can be used as a simple image viewer, but it really shines when you start using its batch editing features. It is powerful enough to handle complex tasks. I think Raindrop has come a long way but Dropmark is perfect for me.Īs for it being too expensive… I dunno. Pixave 2, developed by LittleHJ, is a cloud photo syncing and organizing platform. Pixave is the perfect tool for anyone who wants to organize their photos and artwork. Though I switched to Dropmark a month or so later because the workflow was just faster for me. I was subscribed to Raindrop and it was awesome. Now Raindrop and Dropmark I tried at the same time. Evernote's sync is pretty good though I use it too much for notes that having screengrabs made my list look messy - I'm sure it's possible though depending on how you use evernote? As for Pinterest and Niice, I didn't think it was easy enough for me to just take screenshots and have them uploaded. ![]() Neither Evernote, Pinterest or Niice seemed to work either. 0.09 per image (300 DPI) 0.11 per image (600 DPI) 0.13 per image (1200 DPI) Any resolution upto 1200 DPI. I often found something I saved at work was rarely synced to my home computer. #Pixave syncing macWhat I've learned is the Mac app solutions (Ember, Inboard and Pixave) have a flaky sync solution (if they have one at all). Hmm I've tried a bunch of inspiration grabbing solutions Ember, Inboard, Pixave, Evernote, Pinterest, Niice, Raindrop.io and Dropmark. ![]()
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