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Dropbox is one of the most popular cloud services that lets you store, sync, and share files over the Internet. And, with some work, you can use it on your favorite Linux desktop as well. [ Image ...
If you have a headless Linux server that needs access to files from a Dropbox account, here's what to do.
Dropbox, the free, web-based backup service previously available only for Windows and Mac computers, has added a free, open-source client for Linux to its offerings.
How Dropbox ended my search for seamless sync on Linux Ars tests Dropbox, a shiny new cross-platform file synchronization tool that … ...
Dropbox, the free, web-based file backup service, is giving Linux some love with its new desktop uploader for Linux. Dropbox’s desktop app was previously available on both Windows and Mac. Even ...
In a continuing series of articles highlighting that GNU/Linux is a viable replacement operating system, today we're exploring how to use Dropbox on the popular Ubuntu distribution. For those who ...
We love Dropbox here at Linux Journal. It's cross-platform, offers a decent free offering and generally "just works". It has some problems though. Dropbox is proprietary. Dropbox stores a copy of your ...
Dropbox has announced that starting on November 7th 2018, only the ext4 filesystem will be supported in Linux for synchronizing folders in the Dropbox desktop app. Those Linux users who have synch ...
It's not really fair to compare Dropbox directly with BitTorrentSync. First of all, my title implies Dropbox is somehow inferior. To be honest, I haven't found anything that works as smoothly as ...
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