The discord is also very active and the devs respond well to bugs and feature requests.
However, I've been using it for about 6 months and have experienced all sorts of weird bugs/performance issues between the server app and the mobile app. I'm now considering a more barebones solution of using Syncthing + copyparty (as a web UI) to just sync photos from my phone to a RPi, and then running backups to another server with a cron job.
> Having just migrated to Kysely from TypeORM, we were already seeing massive improvements with regard to speed and memory usage in other parts of the application as we migrated queries to use the streaming interface (see #16600, #16666, #16700, #16706, etc.).
I would generally suggest folks look at something like ElectricSQL Postgres Sync Engine. There's a pretty good ShapeStream HTTP API for shipping shape logs across to the client. It can do so much of the heavy lifting for shipping updates for you, & will be reliable! https://electric-sql.com/docs/api/clients/typescript#shapest...
ElectricSQL are also authors of pglite, a wasm postgres, for running a sync-ed to mini postgres on the client (via wasm). https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37584049 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41224689
Personally, I don’t want cloud sync/storage, but I understand it’s a need for many users. What I hope is that a fully local mode can be considered in the future. For me, the goal is simply to have a great photo management app. Google Photos, for example, limits functionality if you don’t use their cloud and pushes you toward paid storage. That’s where Immich has a opportunity to shine.
Say I deleted a photo from my device, and it gets deleted on the server?
This article just highlights how hard it is to make optional offline applications. I feel like there should be a database-level solution to all this synchronizing.
Postgres can't run on a phone, so that's not a candidate for fully-synced database.
Following the issue now
dpcx•4mo ago
The second issue is still related to timestamps from iCloud photos. The date that's on the photo in iCloud is not respected when uploading to Immich, meaning photos tagged from 40-90 years ago show up as being taken today.