FileZilla Pro to add new features after recent customer survey FileZilla refocuses on security after participation in EU bug bounty programĮuropean Union-sponsored "bug bounty" program found some security issues which have promptly been fixed. FileZilla Pro to continue work with bug bounty programīuilding on success of participation in EU security project, FileZilla will continue participating and investing project resources in bug bounty program. FileZilla Pro is making it possible for its users to store and share files with greater versatility and security. FileZilla Pro Adds Support for Keystone V3, OneDrive Sharing, and Amazon STSīy adding support for the OpenStack Swift Keystone v3 identity service, OneDrive Sharing, and Amazon Secure Token Service (STS).
When the files are done copying over, run Picasa and all of your pictures, tags, geotags, and other information will be there. Copy and overwrite the db3 folder on your Mac with the backup copy you made. When it’s done loading, close the application and open the directory referenced in Step 1 above.
If you ever need to recover the backup, first install Picasa and run it for the first time. You have successfully create a backup copy of your Picasa database.
Open an external or secondary hard drive and paste the db3 folder in a location you can access at a later time. In my case the database directory is over 1GB, so make sure that the device you copy the folder to can handle the space required.ģ. Note: Before copying the db3 directory you may want to click Get Info when you right click on the folder to see how large the folder is. Right-click the db3 folder and click Copy “db3” from the menu.
In the Picasa3 folder you will find several files, the one we are interested in is the db3 directory which contains Picasa’s database.Ģ. Your User Name > Library > Application Support > Google > Picasa3 On your Mac, open Finder and browse to the following location. Software/Hardware used: Picasa 3.8 running on Mac OS.ġ. When I backup my pictures, am I not also backing up the database? No, when you backup your photos using Picasa, you are just backing up the actual images themselves, not Picasa’s database which contains all of the information (Geotags, name tags, and other information). Have you spent hours tagging your family and friends with Picasa’s face recognition feature? I know I have, with over 20,000 pictures I would be very unhappy if I lost that information, so if you’re looking to safeguard all of that valuable time and information you may want to follow the steps below.