Music: Music specifically syncs music from your iTunes library to your device/service, you can sync based on playlists, albums, genres or artists.As per usual you can choose to sync both ways or just from the device/service to your Mac or vice versa. Contacts: Displays the name of any existing contact lists that you have on connected devices or services and allows you to either individually select which ones you want to sync or simply select all of them.You can also opt to exclude specific file types, paths or subfolders from syncing and determine how to resolve sync conflicts. Folders: This allows you to sync folders across devices or services, you select the folder on the Mac and then the folder on the device or service that you want to sync and finally whether you want to sync both ways or just from the device/service to your Mac or vice versa.Other than covering reminders rather than calendars it mirrors the above-referenced functionality of the calendar syncing exactly. Reminders: Sort of a subset of calendars, the only service that I tested which offered Reminders as a syncing option was Dropbox.You also have the option to incrementally set how far in the past and future you want to sync your calendars from 1 to 47 weeks or simply sync everything. Calendar: Choose which of your calendars you would like to sync between devices and whether you want to sync both ways or just from the device/service to your Mac or vice versa.Export is available as with SMS, but no search function here. You can sort by missed, received or outgoing. Calls: Just a list of your calls along with the length of the call, date and time.Do note that this is SMS only, MMS is simply missing from the conversations. SMS: Gives you a full list of your text messages sorted by the recipient, you can export either the entire collection or individual recipients. Photos: Choose which photo folders you would like to sync between devices and whether you want to sync just from the device/service to your Mac or just from your Mac to the device/service.The options available will vary depending on the device or service that you are syncing with your Mac, but the full list includes: The volume of options available is one of the key features of SyncMate as again we are well past the point that simply keeping a single device in sync with your computer is relevant, it’s managing your entire digital life that’s a challenge. You can use SyncMate to sync with Android devices, Google accounts, iOS devices, additional Mac computers, external hard drives, Dropbox, iCloud, MTP Devices and/or Microsoft Services (Outlook, Office 365, One Drive). Most Mac owners rely on iTunes to handle this kind of thing for them, but SyncMate is considerably more versatile than iTunes, easier to use and critically for us actually supports Android devices. The app is designed to allow you to sync data from a whole host of devices and services to and from your Mac. While for the most part, we as Android users rely on Google services to keep our devices and accounts synced up, for those of us that use macOS everything doesn’t always play nicely together, enter SyncMate.
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