I just had to email me a file I got sent to my phone and I feel unable to accept this as the better solution.

What you do guys use for inter-device communication?

  • autriyo@feddit.org
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    20 days ago

    Mostly Nextcloud, for my Keepass databases that doesn’t work though. Because the android client handles files completely different than the desktop versions.

    So for that I use syncthing with my home server being a hub, that everything syncs to locally, if I need updates to propagate while I’m not home I VPN in. However I rarely need to do that.

      • autriyo@feddit.org
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        20 days ago

        Idk rember exactly, on desktop Nextcloud adds a folder structure to the OSs filesystem.

        On android it doesn’t do that, instead you either open a file from within Nextcloud, which confuses Keepass, and Nextcloud if you change anything. Or at least the sync database feature doesn’t work, or smth like that.

        If I wasn’t careful with adding new entries I’d get a lot of conflicts that weren’t a single click to resolve.

        Syncthing on Android does exactly what the nextcloud- client does on desktop. So the file is just sitting in a folder, and any changes can be ingested into wherever I have and old version of a database open, by using the synchronize with file option.

        • Mihies@programming.dev
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          20 days ago

          I think the problem is that Android doesn’t immediately upload the changes since Keepass (which one are you using?) doesn’t poll all the time - assuming you opened your .kdbx through “Nextcloud” option. You can always use “Synchronize database…” option of Keepass2Android that will upload or download everything. And even if you have conflicts, they are usually easily solved by merging changes. At least that’s my experience.

  • Akip@piefed.world
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    20 days ago

    USB Stick and USB wire?

    no need to fiddle with an app, nothing to configure, no updates, works even with relatively big file sizes, surprisingly fast?

  • lemonhead2@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago
    1. syncthing (file synchronization)
    2. kdeconnect (file transfers, clipboard sharing, presentation remote)
    3. deskflow (keyboard and mouse sharing)
    4. warpinator (one off file sharing)
    5. rsync / scp (one off file copies / backups)
  • thanksforallthefish@literature.cafe
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    20 days ago

    I have sftp setup on my 2 main PCs and a client on my phone (it’s not a server). For the rest of the family who have dual Mint/Windows boots I also have warpinator installed on mine and theirs - it’s point to point for the enrolled devices but is currently only setup to work within the LAN.

    https://warpinator.net/

    Primary filesharing is simply the NAS which is visible to all devices on the LAN (can be made available externally but I haven’t). This is a recent addition and no one uses warpinator any more.

    Edit to clarify I don’t have sftp server on phone

    • Ekky@sopuli.xyz
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      20 days ago

      Might want to boot up warpinator myself, but from their website:

      #Winpinator for Windows PC​

      For Windows users, this software is readily available for the Windows platform, allowing easy installation of both 32-bit and 64-bit versions. It facilitates seamless file and folder sharing between Microsoft Windows and Linux via LAN.

      It seems like there might be a slight error in your question. It’s possible that you’re referring to “WinZip” instead of “Winpinator.” WinZip is a popular file compression and archive utility for Windows. If you’re looking for information on WinZip, you can visit the official WinZip website to download and learn more about the application: WinZip Official Website.

      ???

  • eodur@piefed.social
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    20 days ago

    Depends on the scenario, but I’ll use KDE Connect, NextCloud, VaultWarden send, or just go old scp.

  • StrawberryPigtails@discuss.tchncs.de
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    20 days ago

    Most of the time I use Nextcloud. If I can’t wait for the file to sync I’ll use either email or a jump drive depending on which devices I’m moving data between. I

    If I remember that I can, I’ll occasionally use bluetooth to send from my phone to one of my computers.

  • fozid@feddit.uk
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    20 days ago

    I use Bluetooth. Or if a device doesn’t have it, I will drop it into my server with scp or filebrowser.

  • kokomo@reddit.kokomo.cloud
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    20 days ago

    Honestly, syncthing, croc, vaultwarden send, Send (fork of firefox’s send before they discontinued it, still works), Privatebin, etc.

  • black0ut@pawb.social
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    20 days ago

    For sending files between a phone and a PC, I use KDE Connect.

    For sending files between PCs, I use SSH.

    Both are really simple and lightweight tools that normally come preinstalled, and you can use them with no configuration.

  • talkingpumpkin@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    For files I use syncthing (also for music/photos/notes/etc… syncing files is IMHO the way to go wherever applicable).

    For sending links to my PC (eg. articles linked from podcasts’ notes) I used to rely on firefox sync, but I’m starting to distance myself from Mozilla so I am gonna experiment with wallabang.

    For sending small notes to myself (stuff that I want to sort or act upon when I get to my PC), I’m using signal’s “note to self” but I’m investigating alternatives because signal doesn’t mark such messages as unread and so sometimes I forget I’ve sent some.

    • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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      20 days ago

      Yep. For folders where I want access quick access to everything in the folder, SyncThing is best.

      Starting to dabble with KDE Connect for one-off file transfers where SyncThing is overkill

  • darklamer@feddit.org
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    20 days ago

    I always have SSH everywhere on everything and I could never understand why anyone ever would want to make it more complicated than that.

    • hirihit640@sh.itjust.works
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      20 days ago

      Most people probably don’t care but it can be a security risk, allowing malware to move “laterally” between all your devices. For my main devices I don’t give them SSH access to each other, but I do give them SSH access to my secondary devices (like a Pi-Hole)

      • darklamer@feddit.org
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        20 days ago

        […] it can be a security risk, allowing malware to move “laterally” between all your devices.

        Unless you do something incredibly stupid, such as allowing keyless login or sharing keys (or having unencrypted keys or keys without a passphrase, seriously), I find it hard to see how that would actually happen in practice.

        • hirihit640@sh.itjust.works
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          20 days ago

          Even if you have a password for your ssh key, malware on your system can just wait until you enter the password.

          My point is that SSH access is very powerful, and effectively means that the security of the SSH server is reduced to the security of the SSH client. If your SSH client is pwned, so is your server. If you have 10 devices each with ssh access to each other, then if any one device is pwned, all devices are pwned as well.

          This is not the case for systems designed for file sharing only. For example with syncthing, if one device gets pwned, all it can do is send files to the other devices.

          • darklamer@feddit.org
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            19 days ago

            Even if you have a password for your ssh key, malware on your system can just wait until you enter the password.

            Sure, it’s just that from my point-of-view I’d be toast anyway if anyone managed to gain that level of access.