I have to change cloud drive service yet again
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@jaredbusch said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
The issues with @guyinpv is that he is never doing what is recommended.
He was told that no sync client will ever do what he wants.
He was told to use WebDAV.
He has not done so, to my knowledge.
So, of course it does not work the way he wants.
Also, as you can see from his post about DropBox, he has no problem lying and stealing in order to spend less on a service.
So far, no sync client is doing what we want.
WebDAV is not the answer to my questions. Nobody here is going to work all day out of Cyberduck.
I talked to Dropdox support directly and they are fine with sharing users if that is how your office functions. In other words, "general" computers that multiple people use, they don't belong to any one person, so general accounts can be set up on them. We have generic shipping computers, floating stations, lobby computer, multimedia computer, etc. They aren't used by any one account, so a shared account is perfectly fine with Dropbox.
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@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
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@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
is it just a bad practice, or is it against the TOS?
It is not against the TOS. If you have a standard DB account, you can install it on as many devices as you want.
If you have a DB Business account, which is minimum 3 users I think, then each user should have their own account.Dropbox was perfectly fine with me purchasing multiple standard accounts and then installing them on whatever devices make sense. But if we wanted a business plan, they want one account per user. Although when I talked to them about our "generic" multi-user computers, they were still okay with having one account used on multiple general stations.
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@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
So far, no sync client is doing what we want.
This is 100% correct. No sync client can possibly do what you want.
WebDAV is not the answer to my questions. Nobody here is going to work all day out of Cyberduck.
Who said anything about using Cyberduck? WebDAV get's mounted like any other mount point in Windows. Nothing additional needed.
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@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
WebDAV is not the answer to my questions. Nobody here is going to work all day out of Cyberduck.
What... what are you talking about here? WebDAV connects identically to how a SMB share connects on a Windows machine. You simply mount it as a shared drive or add the WebDAV URL as a quick access point.
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@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
WebDAV is not the answer to my questions. Nobody here is going to work all day out of Cyberduck.
What... what are you talking about here? WebDAV connects identically to how a SMB share connects on a Windows machine. You simply mount it as a shared drive or add the WebDAV URL as a quick access point.
OK good - I wasn't the only one wondering what Cyberduck was all about
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@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
is it just a bad practice, or is it against the TOS?
It is not against the TOS. If you have a standard DB account, you can install it on as many devices as you want.
If you have a DB Business account, which is minimum 3 users I think, then each user should have their own account.Dropbox was perfectly fine with me purchasing multiple standard accounts and then installing them on whatever devices make sense. But if we wanted a business plan, they want one account per user. Although when I talked to them about our "generic" multi-user computers, they were still okay with having one account used on multiple general stations.
OK that makes sense. So those people don't have a personal computer they use as well? If they don't, then I agree they won't need individual accounts (from your conversation), but in fact you'll end up with additional account(s) over everyone who does have a specific assigned computer.
i.e. 10 users 15 computers, 5 of them shared, 10 assigned, you'll need at least 11 accounts, or use one of the user's accounts on the 5 shared - but then you have no accountability for that one user - maybe that's not an issue.
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@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
WebDAV is not the answer to my questions. Nobody here is going to work all day out of Cyberduck.
What... what are you talking about here? WebDAV connects identically to how a SMB share connects on a Windows machine. You simply mount it as a shared drive or add the WebDAV URL as a quick access point.
OK good - I wasn't the only one wondering what Cyberduck was all about
Cyberduck is a webdav explorer. It has its uses to test (as it can accept invalid SSL certs, whereas Windows needs a properly signed one) but it's not a production software meant to be worked in day-to-day.
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@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
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@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
Modern SaberDAV (the WebDAV server that NextCloud uses) can handle file locks similar to Sharepoint. WebDAV is a transitional technology in my mind but it does a fantastic job of it.
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@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
Modern SaberDAV (the WebDAV server that NextCloud uses) can handle file locks similar to Sharepoint. WebDAV is a transitional technology in my mind but it does a fantastic job of it.
Offline access is the real issue. Apps that understand how to natively talk to something like NC (is that a thing?) or OneDrive or SharePoint seems to really be the future. You open the app, the app has direct access to the data in question.
The problem comes in when you need/want offline access. How do you set it up at an app level for online syncing?
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@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
Modern SaberDAV (the WebDAV server that NextCloud uses) can handle file locks similar to Sharepoint. WebDAV is a transitional technology in my mind but it does a fantastic job of it.
Offline access is the real issue. Apps that understand how to natively talk to something like NC (is that a thing?) or OneDrive or SharePoint seems to really be the future. You open the app, the app has direct access to the data in question.
The problem comes in when you need/want offline access. How do you set it up at an app level for online syncing?
Hence why I called WebDAV a transitional technology. It's good for the applications that can't directly access the date on the webserver. By the way Office natively uses WebDAV to access files on Sharepoint and Onedrive.
How do you do that with traditional on-site SMB shares? Sure you can do offline files but that introduces the same issues that we've been talking about here.
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@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
Modern SaberDAV (the WebDAV server that NextCloud uses) can handle file locks similar to Sharepoint. WebDAV is a transitional technology in my mind but it does a fantastic job of it.
Offline access is the real issue. Apps that understand how to natively talk to something like NC (is that a thing?) or OneDrive or SharePoint seems to really be the future. You open the app, the app has direct access to the data in question.
The problem comes in when you need/want offline access. How do you set it up at an app level for online syncing?
LibreOffice talks to it natively.
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@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
Modern SaberDAV (the WebDAV server that NextCloud uses) can handle file locks similar to Sharepoint. WebDAV is a transitional technology in my mind but it does a fantastic job of it.
Offline access is the real issue. Apps that understand how to natively talk to something like NC (is that a thing?) or OneDrive or SharePoint seems to really be the future. You open the app, the app has direct access to the data in question.
The problem comes in when you need/want offline access. How do you set it up at an app level for online syncing?
Hence why I called WebDAV a transitional technology. It's good for the applications that can't directly access the date on the webserver. By the way Office natively uses WebDAV to access files on Sharepoint and Onedrive.
How do you do that with traditional on-site SMB shares? Sure you can do offline files but that introduces the same issues that we've been talking about here.
From a central shared drive - you're right, same problem.
@guyinpv - why the need for syncing? are the people really needing offline file access?
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Why won't office 365 work? You can sync the user's files locally. I'm not understanding why that won't work for your situation. What am I missing?
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@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@dashrender said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@irj said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
I use NC and love it like everyone else. However for this scenario, Office online and one drive is the best tool for what you are trying to accomplish.
It's simple, easy to use and requires very minimal training since the company is already likely utilizing office . It functions just like the desktop versions in every way and makes file sharing extremely easy.
When I tested with OneDrive over a year ago, it wasn't syncing files the way we need. It wasn't letting us sync to desktop any shared folders. I believe it might be able to do this now, I'd have to test again.
We do have Office365 but we don't have accounts for every user individually. Some of our office computers are shared and so multiple people might be working under the same user.
I personally have my own O365 business account for my home business and I've found it to work pretty well although I don'y have any shared folders with other people.
I feel like it's been only a couple months since I scrubbed onedrive off all our computers cause it wasn't working right. Feels wrong to go right back to it again. What a pain.
One Drive Sharing in itself should be sufficient. If I create a file, I can share with certain users or everyone and they are able to see it under "Shared with Me" directly under their OneDrive.
If it is shared in OneDrive, then why copy it to a network shared folder? That doesnt really make any sense? I can understand copying it locally of course, but why the need for it to be in a shared folder?
Btw that is very bad practice to share accounts like that, which I am sure you already know.
To my knowledge (tested about a year ago), OneDrive folders when shared could not be synced to local computers. It would only sync your own folders. This may have changed but local computer sync simply couldn't be done back when I used it.
I'm not doing a second copy to a local shared folder. I simply want local sync period. Obviously if our share becomes a lot larger than 11GB, it will begin to make more sense to not sync absolutely everything. But the folder isn't growing that fast so I'll wait for that day.
Syncing 11 GB just seems like a horrible situation. How do these system deal with file locks?
I'm in your same exact boat. If I want to move to LANLess, I'm going to have to break my users away from a general sync'ed drive - at least in my mind. Sync your personal files, but the central shared filestore - that's likely going to have to go on a checkout like basis with SharePoint or maybe NextCloud - but it will require re-education of users on how to use it.
Modern SaberDAV (the WebDAV server that NextCloud uses) can handle file locks similar to Sharepoint. WebDAV is a transitional technology in my mind but it does a fantastic job of it.
Offline access is the real issue. Apps that understand how to natively talk to something like NC (is that a thing?) or OneDrive or SharePoint seems to really be the future. You open the app, the app has direct access to the data in question.
The problem comes in when you need/want offline access. How do you set it up at an app level for online syncing?
Hence why I called WebDAV a transitional technology. It's good for the applications that can't directly access the date on the webserver. By the way Office natively uses WebDAV to access files on Sharepoint and Onedrive.
How do you do that with traditional on-site SMB shares? Sure you can do offline files but that introduces the same issues that we've been talking about here.
From a central shared drive - you're right, same problem.
@guyinpv - why the need for syncing? are the people really needing offline file access?
Because he has no idea what he is doing.
The answer to what he wants is to use WebDAV properly.
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@obsolesce said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
You're not using the correct tool for the job IMHO. This isn't what NC/ODFB/etc is for.
I'll say this again.
And I also agree 100% with Jared.
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@obsolesce said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@obsolesce said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
You're not using the correct tool for the job IMHO. This isn't what NC/ODFB/etc is for.
I'll say this again.
And I also agree 100% with Jared.
I'll disagree with your quoted statement, because it is perfectly fine to use those solutions in this way. With WebDAV. That is all he has to correctly do.
He can never do what he wants with a sync client design.
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@jaredbusch said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@obsolesce said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@obsolesce said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
You're not using the correct tool for the job IMHO. This isn't what NC/ODFB/etc is for.
I'll say this again.
And I also agree 100% with Jared.
He can never do what he wants with a sync client design.
That's what I was referring to. His whole issue is he's doing it wrong. WebDAV correctly would completely resolve it, and obviously using ODFB or SharePoint. Not dicking around with everyone having their own sync'd copy of it like how they were doing it.
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@coliver said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
@guyinpv said in I have to change cloud drive service yet again:
WebDAV is not the answer to my questions. Nobody here is going to work all day out of Cyberduck.
What... what are you talking about here? WebDAV connects identically to how a SMB share connects on a Windows machine. You simply mount it as a shared drive or add the WebDAV URL as a quick access point.
You are correct. I conflated earlier comments regarding using SCP and Cyberduck, etc.