It bulk uploads all photos and keeps looking for new ones and uploads those too.
Simply download PicBackMan (it's free!), register your account, connect to your online store and tell PicBackMan where your photos are - PicBackMan does the rest, automatically. PicBackMan is the easiest and simplest way to keep your photos safely backed up in one or more online accounts. Photos are precious memories and all of us never want to ever lose them to hard disk crashes or missing drives. Quick Tip to ensure your Photos never go missing Click the Other button to select the library on the new drive. A dialog appears showing the current library selection. If you choose 'Original' in 'File Type', iPhoto will not embed the keywords and GPS data in your exported photos. Hold down the Option key and launch Photos. If you don't have enough storage space, then hust export a few albums from iPhoto and then delete them. Make sure that you have enough storage space on your hard drive before doing this procedure.
You may have to export all photos by year to make file management easier on the Windows PC.
Go to 'Events' view and select the event which you want to export. Now you must export the entire event to Windows PC.
This will give you the photos in folder which represents the 'Events' in your iPhoto Library. Select 'Original' option in 'Kind' and 'Event Name' option in the 'Subfolder Format' and then click 'Export' button. Click 'File' menu and select 'Export' option.
To do so, open 'iPhoto' on your Mac and select all your photos to transfer. Assuming you want to add them to Photos, just open Photos not full screen and drag them from the external drive into the window. You can transfer all your photos from iPhoto to Windows with simple steps. The most important thing is your photos and videos. But if you want change your Mac computer to Windows PC, then you need to transfer you all data from Mac to Windows PC. The disk will show up in the Finder’s sidebar or on the desktop (or both).By default, iPhoto is a photo management program which comes standard on every Mac computer. Then go to System Preferences/iCloud, sign in, and check Photos syncing. Go to Photos/Preferences/iCloud and set up syncing. Just quit the Photos app, locate the library file (in your Pictures folder, by default), and drag it to the newly mounted disk. Quit and reopen Photos with the option/alt key held down and select the Library on the external Drive as the system Library. It’s meant for moving your Photos library to an external drive, but it works the same way when using a disk image. Apple has an official guide for this part. Next, we perform the final step - moving your Photos library. Move your Photos library to the sparse disk image Click on your own name, and drag the image file from your Pictures folder into the Login Items section. To add the sparse image to your login items, open System Preferences, then click on Users & Groups. And remember, Photos downloads images from iCloud even while the app itself isn’t running. If you don’t do this, Photos won’t be able to find your library. Next we add the disk to login items, so that it mounts whenever you start up your Mac.
Drag Photos Library to a location on your external storage device. You can open your home folder by choosing Go > Home from the Finder menu bar. By default, Photos Library is stored in the Pictures folder of your home folder. In the Finder, open the folder that contains Photos Library. Add the sparse image disk to your login items Drag the new sparse image to your login items. Move Photos Library to the storage device.