If something isn't working, find the symptom below.
Peak looks in ~/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/Backup/. If that folder is empty or doesn't exist, you don't have a Finder backup of any iPhone on this Mac yet.
Fix:
Peak only sees the folder you selected — see Choosing your backup folder. Common mistakes:
~/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/Backup/ (the Backup folder), or a specific device's folder inside it.This is normal if your Finder has "Encrypt local backup" turned on. See Working with Encrypted Backups.
If you don't know the password, that page walks through your options (Keychain recovery, switching to unencrypted, or resetting on the phone).
Two possible causes:
~/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/Backup/) and start a fresh backup in Finder.If "No content flagged" but you know there's stuff in there:
If the forensic PDF is empty (no bubbles): the thread really has no readable text. This happens with attachment-only threads (all photos/videos, no text), or with very old iOS versions where text was stored differently. Open the PDF and look at the last page — the Forensic Manifest lists the message count, which should tell you whether messages were found at all.
Some threads are huge. The "Land Ain't Free" group chat in our test set has 14,000+ messages and takes about a minute to render. Peak streams progress events but the UI may not update granularly for the longest phase (PDF rendering).
Signal that it's still working: open Activity Monitor → look for the Peak process. If it's using CPU, it's making progress. If it's idle for more than 30 seconds, something's stuck — quit and try again.
For huge threads, consider:
Peak uses macOS's QuickLook framework to generate the poster frame for videos. If the video file format can't be previewed by QuickLook on your macOS version, you'll see a placeholder bubble instead of the poster. The actual .mov file is still embedded in the PDF — open the PDF's attachments panel to extract and play.
If you see this for normal .mov files, restart Peak (QuickLook sometimes wedges). If it persists, the video may be in a format QuickLook doesn't support on your macOS version.
Most likely you're using Preview.app, which doesn't fully support cross-document PDF named destinations. Workarounds:
page N. Open the forensic PDF and ⌘G → enter the page number.Finder won't always overwrite the same backup — sometimes it makes a brand-new folder if it thinks the previous one is stale. Look in the sidebar for multiple backup rows. The most recent one is at the top.
If you want to delete old backups: in Finder, with the iPhone selected, click Manage Backups… under the Backups section. You'll see a list with sizes and dates. Right-click a row to delete.
Crash logs go to ~/Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports/. Look for filenames starting with Peak. The most recent one will have the crash details.
For now (v1), there's no built-in crash reporter. If you hit a reproducible crash, the details worth keeping on hand are:
Peak updates through the Mac App Store. If you're not on the latest version:
Turn on automatic updates in System Settings → App Store to get them without thinking about it.
Peak doesn't have a customer support channel — it's a one-time purchase maintained by one person. If the steps above don't help, re-read the help doc most relevant to what you're doing; the docs cover everything Peak can do.
The product is built by one person; expect a slow turnaround on issues. Mission-critical use cases should not depend on Peak alone — keep your own copies of important backups and consider commercial alternatives if you need guaranteed support.
Next: Privacy & Security FAQ.