BundleSync: Atomic Cloud Storage for Multi-File Project Directories
Standard cloud providers (like iCloud and Google Drive) often fail to treat multi-file project directories as atomic units, leading to file corruption, sync conflicts, and 'invalid project' errors for writers moving between desktop and mobile devices.
Analysis generated from 6 real complaints across 1 communities · Affects: Long-form writers, novelists, academics, and screenwriters using project-based software (Scrivener, Aeon Timeline).
Verdict
Promising. While the audience is niche, their pain point is high-stakes (data loss of a book). The technical challenge of 'atomic' sync for folders is well-defined and solvable by a solo developer without needing a massive infrastructure.
Pain Point
Software like Scrivener stores projects as folders (packages) rather than single files. When standard cloud providers sync these, they often sync files piece-meal. If a user opens the project on an iPad before every sub-file has synced, the project metadata becomes mismatched, leading to the dreaded 'Invalid Project' error or, worse, lost chapters.
Target Users
- Professional Novelists: High volume of work, frequent device switching.
- Academic Researchers: Using Scrivener/Zotero-style bundles for long-form dissertations.
- Dropbox Haters: Users who only have Dropbox to sync one app and resent the $10+/month cost for a service they don't like.
Evidence
Multiple App Store reviews for Scrivener (the market leader) specifically complain about the 'Dropbox-only' requirement and the frequency of sync-related project errors. Users are explicitly asking for iCloud support or alternative sync methods that don't corrupt their data.
MVP Idea
BundleSync Lite: A desktop app that watches your 'Projects' folder. Whenever a change is detected, it creates an atomic, versioned snapshot and mirrors it to a specialized backend. The iOS companion app 'locks' the project during sync to ensure the user never opens a partially-synced bundle.
Implementation Difficulty
Moderate. Requires deep knowledge of file system watchers and building a robust conflict-resolution engine. However, by narrowing the scope to specific file extensions (.scriv, .at2), the edge cases are manageable compared to a general-purpose Dropbox competitor.
Revenue Potential
There are hundreds of thousands of Scrivener users. Capturing 1,000 users at $10/month (a lower 'insurance' price point) generates $120k ARR. Reaching the 100-user mark at $20/month is highly realistic given the intensity of the 'lost folder' pain expressed in reviews.
What people actually said
- App Store
“When I try to open a project on my iPad or phone it sees the project but which is in the correct folder but I keep getting invalid project errors.”
View original in Scrivener → - App Store
“Syncing across devices requires a Dropbox subscription— and I have still lost entire folders trying to sync.”
View original in Scrivener → - App Store
“Add sync for other services besides Dropbox!”
View original in Scrivener →
Existing solutions
- Dropbox
- Ulysses
- Manual ZIP Backups
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