There is an open-source cross-platform sync tool called unison
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/
You may want to take a look.
Latest management headlines from Network World:
The fifth Golden Turkey Awards
IT sector adds jobs despite economic turmoil
Entuity's Eye watches over power consumption
|
Does Verizon's Voyager stack up to the iPhone? |
|
|
5 IT skills that won't boost your salary
[1,407]
Women 4 times more likely than men to cough up personal info
[589]
Japan's 10 funniest tech-related commercials [Videos]
[407]
Throwing away a promo CD is "unauthorized distribution"?
[1,265]
Adults too quick to dismiss educational video games
[682]
Attack of the iPhone clones [Slideshow]
[578]
10 things IT needs to know about AJAX
[1,258]
This Year's 25 Geekiest 25th Anniversaries [Slideshow]
[409]
|
|
Oh, yeah - rsync
What I failed to mention is that I recently installed a Windows rsync server so I can sync photos & music between my WinXP & Linux box.
I used deltacopy server
http://www.aboutmyip.com/AboutMyXApp/DeltaCopy.jsp
for WinXP
\\Greg
Dropbox
Apparently Gibbs has never heard of CVS servers and SSH/scp scripts.
Syncplicity
Better than DropBox. You don't have to keep your files in pre-specified folders.
iDisk anyone?
From the description this (dropbox that is) sounds like what Apple's iDisk has been doing for years, including the sharing and web access part.
Post new comment