The iPhone is downloading the full res image from the cloud so you can visualize it, edit it, or share it. So, when you tap on it, the image will start downloading at its full res, that is why you might see a white circle on the right down corner. But you will have low-res thumbnails of those images as a preview. However, it will work with Prompt and from other hosts.The iPhone will stop having the original, full-res image on your phone, and store it all on the cloud, whether that’s 2 mb, 4 mb, or 24 mb (or pixels, however you want to see it). Note that this doesn't work as easily as BTMM because you still have to make sure that you have open ports on your router, etc.
I have not used but they have a Mac update client too (which will automatically update whenever your Mac's IP address changes) and they will give you three free hostnames if you create a free account (no credit card info needed). I've used DynDNS for years, but they have gotten more and more commercially focused (used to be able to get 5 free dynamic hostnames, now it's 1, and you can only get that one by giving them a credit card number and trying out one of their premium services and then canceling it). There are other sites on the web which will do dynamic DNS hosting for you. Otherwise anyone on the Internet could try to gain access to your Macs if they knew the BTMM domain name.) (I believe Apple considers this a security-related feature. However, note that even if you know the BackToMyMac domain, you can only use it if you are connecting from a computer that is connected also logged into 'BackToMyMac'. Source: by skyisle But here's why that still doesn't help you… I just learned a nifty way to find your BTMM domain nameĮcho show Setup:/Network/BackToMyMac | scutil | sed -n 's/.* : *\(.*\).$/\1/p' mine's been static for quite a few years now. Step 3: Connect # ssh not sure if that number will ever change, so you may or may not need to repeat Step 1 at some point later on. If you want to see the IPv6 address for a specific host, you can type # dns-sd -G v6 .Īnd it'll display something like: 17:37:47.504 Add 2 0. You can only access this from a computer that is also set up for BTMM on the same Apple ID account, because this hostname will resolve to an IPv6 address that is really the end of an encrypted network tunnel between your Apple ID's BTMM computers. (Any spaces in your computer name will be hyphens in this domain). Or if you already know the hostname just access it directly as. You can use these tools to browse that domain for services, e.g. This applies to each use of dns-sd, here and below. You'll also need to press ctrl+ C after it displays the information you're after (it is designed to continue listening and updating). You're after the full domain, something like .com, however dns-sd will display it (kind of) in reverse order, on separate lines: 23:41:33.309 Added The output is formatted slightly awkwardly, but what you're after is the numeric ID, which should be on the last line. Step 1: Find out your iCloud BTMM domainįirst, look up your domain using the DNS Service Discovery tool: # dns-sd -E (where the field is a number automatically generated for your Apple ID). you'll also see file shares in the side-bar of Finder, and remote Airport devices in Airport Utility), but I'll leave the full instructions below for the more arbitrary use-cases.įor command line tools, Apple have replaced the old
This is obviously much easier for the individual apps that support iCloud/BTMM lookup (e.g. From here you can browse by ssh/sftp/ftp/telnet hosts on the local or BTMM network.
In Terminal, in the Shell menu select New Remote Connection. There's a very simple way to simply SSH to a BTMM/iCloud computer: