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good idea


i've gotta agree with you on this one </3


there may be some parts that read like really, really broken English like the one you just said, but for the most part I feel like it's okayishly readable. and again, this was just an end-of-the-week side project that I made because a random person in school gave me the idea to do so, so it won't be too polished :P


thank you for the kind words :)


As a syncthing user who has also thought about this problem, syncthing is good but reading around it seems like running it on a phone is a pain and then simply pasting from share or clipboard is yet another pain to implement. So there is possibly some useful stuff TODO in bridging all that friction. I haven't literally tried but have read about it all once and decided not to. Cool space of problems.


saw this post last night and tbh thought it a bit weird since initially it was described by author as “alternative to emailing yourself” - like, really? after 20 years of dropbox? the countless competitors it spawned, including OSS as well as by all major email providers???

came back curious to see if the discussion took a different direction from besides sarcasm or another 30 posts saying “why not syncthing?” - glad to see the couple to comments including OP and yours as constructive.

that being said, i’m a syncthing user, including running my own (st) discovery server on openwrt. aside from some annoyance at rather frequent conflicts and being browser based, im running it on all 5 major OSs, including ios (mobius sync) and android.

i strongly disagree that running it on a phone is a pain, and in fact, found it the most reliable and versatile sync solution for ios by far - and that includes icloud, dropbox, google drive and google photos.

the only thing that comes close is apple photos, but that’s specifically for photos. and that too, only because of the deep os integration, ie always running in the background and allowing seamless access to older photos that are not on device. even then, there’s always a mysterious slight difference in # of items reported on the mac vs the phone - “eventual consistency”, where “eventual” is t=infinity i suppose.


we've all been there


i can't tell if this is satire or not </3


I haven't decided yet :)

More seriously, I am mostly working like this now. I've had at least some data loss or reliability from every single sync solution I've tried so am practicing avoidance where possible.

I really want something to work but I can't find anything that does and I've tried all major ecosystems and syncthing etc.


its something, lets move along quietly and hope they dont notice...

also not sure why so many have a love affair with syncthing, id never heard of it but more diverse software in the world is a good thing imho. the more wheels reinvented the better, its fun!


being fr, i never even knew about syncthing until now. it's (clearly) a lot better, but again, the reason I made this is because of my school's software whitelist. they only allow certain apps to run on my laptop, one of them being python due to out compsci class. since then, I've been using it to get around whitelists and make my own stuff. this allows me to sync up me and my friend's stuff (like projects, etc.) while we're in school and not have to worry about the whitelist :)


That’s perfectly valid. Maybe add it to the top of your readme explaining what problem it solves (need to sync files between machines and all you can use is python).


My initial thought was, man, your school is lame. But maybe it's genius? Creativity thrives in a constrained environment.


In high school they had a few information kiosk computers spread around the various buildings; two in the library, one in the main reception, one in the cafeteria, and one in the mostly unused hallway right outside the computer club room. They were locked down so you could only navigate some intranet pages using a rudimentary on-screen keyboard, with the rest of the hardware in a locked cabinet.

Guess which one got digitally defaced a couple of times each semester. Guess which ones got left alone. Genius move by the IT guy. Every time it happened he would come talk to the club members about the difference between whitehat and blackhat hacking but other than that nobody ever got in trouble.


This kind of whitelisting does absolutely nothing. It's a straight up lolbin. Anyway, if python is allowed, then surely other languages can be added to whitelist. Ask them to whitelist go and use syncthing


> This kind of whitelisting does absolutely nothing.

well, aside from getting students more interested in programming, apparently.


Necessity is the mother of invention, constraints the cradle of imagination, and contrarian teenagers the womb of ingenuity.


trust me, I've tried asking for other programs to be on the whitelist. if they didn't allow firefox, they definitely won't allow synching. and I don't wanna get in trouble either lol


Can you ask them to permit docker?


Or just write a python script wrapper for the syncthing client :)


lol sure i "reinvented it" but the reason I made it in the first place is because my school's whitelist. they whitelisted certain apps (like Python 3.11, for our Comp Sci class) and i've been using that since to get around the whitelist :p


Re-inventing a product is great for learning. Looks like a decent project and hopefully you had a good time solving the issues.


Totally understand your doubts. I mainly made this program to solve a tiny issue that got annoying and repetitive, so I asked myself, "Can I automate this?" 1. Since I mainly use Windows (for school software to run), I cannot simply do this, considering our school blocks any 3rd part app that isn't in their whitelist. 2. Sure, it doesn't _replace_ a USB drive, but it makes it a lot easier, which can _lessen_ the use of a USB drive. 3. Again, I really just made this for myself and a couple of friends at my high school so we can share projects without too much hassle. I just wanted to share it with the world because maybe someone else has the same dumb problem, which could help them too. It's not meant to be a business, just a tool. I'll call that a win if it saves one other person from emailing a file to themselves.


Sorry, I might have edited that /s in too late! This is actually one of the early comments from the Dropbox launch thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8863#9224


I was gonna link to the same thing! Text looked familiar


I’d guess that the overlap of people who email themselves files also use Gmail…which would then also just have Google Drive. Why not use that?


greed, the emotion, is now a simple game of psychology and numbers.

every round, pick an integer between 1 and 10. at the end of the round, points are calculated as: (number you picked) / (number of people who picked that number) if multiple people pick the same number, they split the points. for example, if 4 people choose 8, each gets 2 points (8 / 4). if only you pick 7, you get all 7 points. so, the more greedy people are, the less points they get.

it has a built-in chat so you can bluff about the numbers you chose, and a stat record (people vs points graphs). and a leaderboard...

open source at: https://github.com/sirbread/greed


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