I use KDE Connect
KDE Connect
Why isn’t it Konnect?
КDE Кonneкt.
Syncthing is amazing though.
It’s pretty good. Definitely better then self-hosted stuff like nextcloud, because you don’t need to maintain your own server. But sometimes it takes a while for two hosts to discover each other on the same local area network.
I’ve never noticed any delay after first discovery. But i only use 3 devices so 🤷
Bluetooth file transfer my beloved
That only works if the target is near. You may as well have said semaphore or signal fire.
I’ve been using floppy disks. You mean there are other options now?
Warpinator
Not a single network file transfer protocol in the list.
Imagine not knowing about stuff like SCP/SFTP or SMB.
Pfft I’ve bet you’ve never even tried cross-pollinating a syncmap blockchain to your distributed SM-IP 42G node
Noob
Open source. Works about as good as AirDrop when that isn’t available.
Attach it to a draft email. Log in on the other thing, go to drafts, download your file, delete draft.
KDE Connect and Syncthing do the trick for most stuff. For all else, all hail the USB C M.2 NVME enclosure.
Can’t you just plug your phone straight in and transfer the file? I still prefer KDE connect though.
KDE connect only works painlessly on phones that allow you to use your files… As weird as it is, that’s not most of them.
But you can still move them around somehow and force it to work. Also, the same works for syncthing. USB drivers haven’t been the easiest option for a while.
In Android just selectively enable wireless ADB debugging and then use ADB Explorer. Easier than plugging the phone in, wireless, and allows access to all folders on the device (including /Android/data/* which is blocked from being accessed using on-device file explorers). Turn it off when you’re done. Boom, wireless data transfer to and from an Android device at way faster than cabled SMB speeds.
That would work great for me if it had a linux version. Theoretically someone could just use fuse for it
ADB Explorer is really just a wrapper for adb-pull, you can use that manually on Linux but without the GUI it’s true it’s not quite as seamless.
My charger cable that’s all I want.
you joke, but I’ve got my most recent salvo of audio books sitting in a double sided flash drive on my desk, right now
Solid explorer FTP plugin has always worked fine for me.
SMB/NFS