Chris Caouette wrote:Every time the file gets to iPhoto at 1.59GB it stops.
My first question is "does it really stop?" My second questions is "how long did you wait?"
Some directories contain hundreds, even thousands, of items. This is especially true of folders containing music, pictures, and mail, were the application keeps lots of individual files in one massive folder. This requires QRecall to read and compare hundreds, if not thousands, of file records which in turn require tens of thousands of little reads from the archive.
On a local drive, this can be accomplished pretty quickly. But on some networked file systems this can take orders of magnitude more time. It may seem like the capture is "stuck," when in reality it's simply grinding its way through a bazillion file records.
The way to test this theory is to run an application like Activity Monitor. If the QRecall capture is still working, you should see a steady flurry of small network reads and sends. If you see that, and the CPU usage of QRecall Helper indicates activity, then it's probably still working. BTW, you can use the Activity Monitor to force quit the QRecall Helper process if you need to force an action to stop.