The main cloud services don’t even work natively (GoogleDrive, OneDrive, iCloud) basically the only mainstream choice is Dropbox. I tried to use Google Drive in Mint, and it’s a pain to get it to work, and usually it stops working after computer restarts.

Someone has a recommendation about how to handle these services?

  • LonelyWendigo@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I sick of seeing Google Drive recommended as an alternative to dropbox. (Because I am looking for an alternative to dropbox and so far nothing has feature parity with it and the features I value.) If an app forces me to be logged in to a graphical environment locally on Linux then it has already failed to understand why people use *nix. Google Drive doesn’t keep offline copies and it doesn’t work on CLI. So basically useless on my server. If the files aren’t natively and transparently accesible as a local filesystem while they are synced to the cloud, it’s not a viable Linux Dropbox alternative. I want my files on my machine and a copy on the cloud, not the other way round.

    • RoboRay@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      I have not and do not recommend it. I simply responded to the claim that it doesn’t work, because it does. OP has something else going on that’s causing Google Drive problems.

      I use both Dropbox and Mega and recommend either for someone seeking a simple cloud-sync solution.

    • Skull giver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl
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      11 months ago

      GDrive has command line mount tools and works fine through rsync as long as you put the right tokens in the right places. Duplicity supports Google Drive as a backup destination, which is also quite useful for command line scripts.

      Google doesn’t have any Linux clients other than their ChromeOS client, but there are plenty of tools that will synchronise your files.