You have access to your shared files and you can view everything you’ve shared on your linked computers. To be sure, the SugarSync app is as barebones as it gets. This two step process, while upsetting to those afraid of more than one step, is frustrating at worst and a non-issue at best. However, if you need to transfer odd formats or edit Office or iWork documents (you can view them just fine) you’ll need to email the files to yourself and them open them in Pages. All of my concerns, two years ago, have been address and now you have a fully versioned storage system that you can use to feasibly upload a plethora of files including, but not limited to, MP3s, videos, and documents.Īudio and video files, for the most part, played natively on the iPad. When I last looked at SugarSync the service was in its infancy and I found it slightly lacking. With the assistance of programs like Dropbox and SugarSync, it is possible to cobble together a workflow that doesn’t drive me crazy. It would be better to just have the same grouping structure between the ipad and the desktop versions.I’ve been wondering how, exactly, I’ll be able to do work on my iPad. When I ported this all over to the ipad, only the “subgroups” are used - this means all the subgroups within my major groupings are shuffled. On the desktop, I arranged my papers into major “groups” and then subordinate “subgroups” within those major groups. – I noticed a problem difference between how the paper groupings are stored between the desktop and the ipad versions. It takes planning to make sure that I pre-download all the files that I need before I go offline - it would be nice if I could be sure that they were already there. This is actually one of the main reasons for using this app - so I be productive even when I am away from the internet. I was hoping to be able to look at files when I am “offline”. – I would like the pdf files to be automatically downloaded to my Ipad, without the need to manually download each one. This way you could leave the internet out of it. I can understand that you don’t want to make indefinate space in the cloud for all of our pdf files, but why not just let us sync directly between the ipad and the desktop (the way the Papers app does). – I’m worried that I will eventually hit the 5 GB limit. Hi, I downloaded the Ipad App - this is very helpful.Ī few issues with it for future versions: I was very excited to see the “link to dropbox” but I was honestly hoping I could simply browse to my library (which is already in dropbox) and open it! How easy would that have been?!?! eg - the same library/files used on the ipad sync to the cloud sync to the desktop. I seriously think a single library file format is ideal. any edited files end up in your desktop library. One method would be the integration with other app’s - eg I could open my pdf in goodreader (which I can already do), and after having anotated the document it saves it - back into my endnote iPad Library, which then would sync it to the cloud and to my desktop… (note - one can already do something like this with goodreader-you just load/remote-sync your endnote pdf folder from dropbox. Secondly - annotations need to sync to the document through the clound and to the desktop library. allow an entire group to be set as a “favorite” (the settings menu already has a "manage my groups feature). somehow set the “favorites as a group” so one can move/copy multiple entries into “favorites”.SImply put - there MUST be an easier way to sync-upload PDF’s to the iPad app.
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