When this happens...

Automatically do this!
Convert File Format
Enable Integrations or automations with these events of Google Photos and FFmpeg
Retrieve details and access URLs for a specific photo or video in a user's Google Photos library using its media item ID.
Retrieve a page of the user's Google Photos albums. Supports pageSize and pageToken for pagination, and an option to exclude albums not created by this app.
Create a new Google Photos album with the specified title.
Retrieve details for a specific album in a user's Google Photos library using its album ID.
Upload an image or video from a public URL to a user's Google Photos library and optionally add it to a chosen album.
Convert file format from a existing format to another.

Discover viaSocket, an AI-powered workflow automation platform with 2,000+ integrations. Learn what it is, how it works, and how to set up no-code automated workflows.

Unlock your team's potential with 5 straightforward automation hacks designed to streamline processes and free up valuable time for more important work.

Explore workflow automation: its definition, benefits, how it works, real-world examples, and how to automate with viaSocket.

Discover what webhooks are, how they work, and when to use them. Compare push-based webhooks with APIs and polling, with practical examples and ViaSocket integration.
To start, connect both your Google Photos and FFmpeg accounts to viaSocket. Once connected, you can set up a workflow where an event in Google Photos triggers actions in FFmpeg (or vice versa).
Absolutely. You can customize how Google Photos data is recorded in FFmpeg. This includes choosing which data fields go into which fields of FFmpeg, setting up custom formats, and filtering out unwanted information.
The data sync between Google Photos and FFmpeg typically happens in real-time through instant triggers. And a maximum of 15 minutes in case of a scheduled trigger.
Yes, viaSocket allows you to add custom logic or use built-in filters to modify data according to your needs.
Yes, you can set conditional logic to control the flow of data between Google Photos and FFmpeg. For instance, you can specify that data should only be sent if certain conditions are met, or you can create if/else statements to manage different outcomes.
Google Photos lets you manage photos and albums created by your application in a user’s Google Photos library. You can upload media files, create and organize albums, add media items, and retrieve album or media details.
Learn MoreFFmpeg is a leading multimedia framework used to decode, encode, transcode, mux, demux, stream, filter, and play almost anything that humans and machines have created. It supports the most obscure ancient formats up to the cutting edge.
Learn More