taozero.com

    • Bits
    • Commercials
    • Crave
    • Games
    • Hackintosh
    • iOS
    • Lifehacks
    • Music
    • Open Web
    • OS X
    • Sci-Fi-Fantasy
    • Tech

    Category: OS X


    DropBox – The Best Cross-Platform Folder Sync

    Filed Under: OS X by Ariel Bloch — 2 Comments
    November 8, 2009

    DropBox Anyone that uses more than one computer would stumble pretty soon on the issue of syncing files between them. Especially when you try to be organized – you need your documents, media, configuration, and basically, life – available on every machine you frequent.

    Of course, many people opt on the new philosophy, Living in the Cloud. Every day now it becomes easier then yesterday to have all of your data in the cloud: GMail, Google Docs, Pandora, Hulu, you name it. This method works fine most of the time.

    Personally that is not how I want my life to be. There are many issues with keeping your data elsewhere – no internet connection, or provider server down (happens to all, even the mighty G). Being locked out of your data is a scary proposition, and for me not an option.

    I opt on the other approach – keep my data local, but automatically replicate it across all of the my machines. This allows for immediate access to the data, plus the non-obvious but huge benefit of backup and automatic restore – in case of a catastrophe on one or more of your machines, your most important data is already backed up everywhere.

    In the past I used Folder Share, that became Windows Live Sync once they were bought by Microsoft. I stopped using it once the application chocked on a folder containing more than 10K files. Also, the way to configure it is quite crude, where you have to login to the website, add machines, add folders, define permissions and connect them together. Arggh.

    Enter DropBox. This is by far the simplest, hassle-free, most automatic and smart solution to folder syncing. It just works.

    With DropBox you create a folder that is automatically synced to their server as you change it. Then, when another computer installs DropBox and uses the same dropbox account, its DropBox folder gets synced with any changes from the server. From this point on both folders continuously replicate each other.

    It could not get any simpler then that.

    There are many amazing little things this little service does so well. For instance, when you add or change a file, the file icon has a small sticker that shows its syncing, that changes to a green check-mark when its done. Of course, on all platforms you get a small floating notification once all files were synced to your current machine. Another thing: If you happen to work on the same file at once on both machines, you get a collision notification for you to decide which version to keep.

    I use a Mac at home, a Linux workstation at work and a Windows laptop in between. DropBox works seamlessly on all operating systems, and its quite amazing to see your new note created on Windows, edited on Linux and immediately viewed on your Mac.

    Did I mention its free?

    I use it for several specific features:

    • Keep all my archived files available always
    • Centralize my notes and ideas flow
    • Sync my passwords through encrypted files (Password Safe)
    • Publish massive files for external consumption (a unique feature of DropBox for file sharing to non-DropBox users)

    The iPhone app is out for a few months, and its another neat way to get to your data on the go. Sadly it is read-only, which means you can not add or change a file. If they would enable text file editing through the app, DropBox will become the killer note-taking app on the iPhone, as nothing can beat editing a note and having it immediately available on all of your machines.

    Usually I tend to shun free services, but the business model is to hook you enough so you will need more than the free 2 GB provided in the free account. A 50GB package costs $10 per month, and 100GB for $20. This seems like a fair price to me for such a huge feature, and its clear that somewhere down the path I will have more than 2GB of data to sync…

    All the best, DropBox: Keep up the good work. I wish that more applications would be like that – elegant, simple and just working.

    Signature

    Tags: OS X, Recommended
    Permalink

    Is Apple’s iPhone leading the way to the next OS?

    Filed Under: iOS, OS X by Ariel Bloch — 1 Comment
    January 24, 2007

    Apple iPhoneEveryone has an opinion on the new iPhone by Apple. As a long time admirer of Apple (heck, I still have the first PDA ever, Apple’s Newton), I have an opinion as well.

    First off, its an amazing device – but marketing it as a phone does not work for me. I would almost say that if you consider it as a phone, it is an overly expensive and fragile piece of hardware (although very cool). Just think about the horror of dropping it accidentally and cracking the display – how many times did you drop your phone to see it bouncing off the floor, sliding face down across the room or just forgetting it somewhere? Try doing that with a $500 phone with a huge LCD.

    In addition, I guess I am not so excited about this as a phone also because personally my phone life does not involve browsing the web, or playing music. I am OK with separating my music (iPod 4G, quite old nowadays) from my phone (those get smaller by the day). I just need to be able to call or receive calls.

    However…

    The most exciting thing about this device is its amazing user interface. I is almost an alien technology: Its so much more advanced then anything on the market today, that it would take years for anyone to duplicate the UI with any degree of success. This is the main reason I am still considering buying this adorable device: To be able to scroll stuff, view photos and resize things all day long.

    For me, the killer feature is actually text entry and retrieval. I tried for years all sorts of devices: Starting from the Apple Newton, which was a very ambitious effort, but due to high cost ($800), too slow CPU, imperfect hand-writing recognition software and too big form factor did not make it. It was a huge idea, but they needed hardware that was only appearing years after.

    I used Palm V for a year or two – its quite convenient to read and retrieve, but for me the experience of writing using the stylus did not work, handwriting recognition sucks, and portable keyboard is too bulky.

    Consider the iPhone, now: Having a device that allows you to write text, send it as email and view it in the best UI ever (which only Apple can deliver) might be the winning solution. It still seems to be proven how easy it is to enter text through the thumb-based interface. Even it is quite expensive as a content writing and retrieval gadget, it might be still a winner.

    The next OS?

    Which leads me to the revelation: I am predicting that a few months after this gadget hits production, Apple would reveal the new iMac that has the same user interface (UI). Imagine a desktop OS that behaves with the same elegance and flow – dragging windows, arranging images, smart context-sensitive dialogs, tactile scrolling, etc. Apple did the unbelievable and put OS-X on a slim portable gadget – now, once the UI technology matures, the next big thing would be to complete the full loop and bring this innovative UI to the desktop.

    Obviously this is not an easy feat: I can think easily of many challenges. How would you “right click” without a mouse? How would you make all buttons and widgets finger friendly? What would you do with all the applications out there? All in all, quite challenging. But Apple had already demonstrated that they can deliver. They can do this again.

    Wouldn’t that be something? What do you think?

    Tags: iOS, OS X
    Permalink
    • About

      My name is Ariel Bloch. Software developer, father, gamer, dungeon master, illustrator, photographer and thinker.


      email • Subscribe • Twitter

    • Tags

      Analysis Android Arrgh Blog Brilliant D&D Facebook Firefox Funny Games Hackintosh Imagine Innovation iOS iPhone JJ Abrams Movies Music OpenWeb OS X Quotes Rants Recommended Review Sci-Fi-Fantasy SEO Tech Twitter Watch Windows
    • Friends & links

      • My Photo Gallery on SmugMug
      • My Profile in LinkedIn
      • Orly Ceramics Studio
    • Pages

    • Monthly archives

      • February 2012
      • January 2012
      • September 2011
      • April 2011
      • March 2011
    Powered by WordPress & Web Design Company
    [ Back to top ]