Or even Skydrive? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SkyDrive
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 5:40 AM, glen e. p. ropella
g...@tempusdictum.comwrote:
If you haven't already considered it, SparkleShare might be interesting
to you: http://sparkleshare.org/
Gillian Densmore wrote at 02/20/2013 03:54 PM:
kicking the tires of skydrive like what I see so far. it could be useful as
part of my work flow-
I don't know what kind of limitations are on a free account. I'd need to
dig around to see if they have web and or cloud development and
collaboration tools- by that I meen I don't know if they have
I don't think you ever described your workflow. If you do, we could probably be
more helpful.
;; Gary
On Feb 21, 2013, at 11:40 AM, Gillian Densmore gil.densm...@gmail.com wrote:
kicking the tires of skydrive like what I see so far. it could be useful as
part of my work flow-
I don't know
My backup is a second and third set of spinning disks. Cron job runs each
night and does rsync incremental backups. With 3 TB external USB3.0 disks
costing ~$85 it's cheap to stay backed up.
roberts@Igor:~$ df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sdb1 551G 6.8G 516G
Doug wrote:
My backup is a second and third set of spinning disks. Cron job runs each
night and does rsync incremental backups. With 3 TB external USB3.0 disks
costing ~$85 it's cheap to stay backed up.
Do you courier them to the Trementina CST facility?
Marcus
More like to the dementia facility in Nambe.
--Doug
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 11:12 AM, mar...@snoutfarm.com mar...@snoutfarm.com
wrote:
Doug wrote:
My backup is a second and third set of spinning disks. Cron job runs each
night and does rsync incremental backups. With 3 TB external USB3.0
DropBox syncs files between as many computers as you like, using the cloud.
DropBox folders can be shared with as many people as you invite. It does not
provide its own editing capabilities.
If you want to share an Illustrator file with someone, drag it into the shared
DropBox subfolder. It
Google Drive lets you share and allows you to choose if you want to allow the
sharee to edit the file.
Ed
__
Ed Angel
Founding Director, Art, Research, Technology and Science Laboratory (ARTS Lab)
Professor Emeritus of Computer Science, University of New Mexico
1017 Sierra Pinon
Santa
of this.
--Dean
From: Barry MacKichan barry.mackic...@mackichan.com
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group friam@redfish.com
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2013 11:05 AM
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] cloud backup recomendations wanted
DropBox syncs files
*From:* Barry MacKichan barry.mackic...@mackichan.com
*To:* The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
friam@redfish.com
*Sent:* Wednesday, February 20, 2013 11:05 AM
*Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] cloud backup recomendations wanted
DropBox syncs files between as many computers as you like, using
Complexity Coffee Group
friam@redfish.com
*Sent:* Wednesday, February 20, 2013 11:05 AM
*Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] cloud backup recomendations wanted
DropBox syncs files between as many computers as you like, using the
cloud. DropBox folders can be shared with as many people as you invite
If you haven't already considered it, SparkleShare might be interesting
to you: http://sparkleshare.org/
Gillian Densmore wrote at 02/20/2013 03:54 PM:
While investigating cloud back up I ran across a outfit called
cloudswave (cloudswave http://www.cloudswave.com)-who pointed me to
there
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