Ubuntu / Linux news and application reviews.

ownCloud Client 1.7.0 Released With Selective Sync Support

| Date: November 10, 2014 | View Comments | Tags: cloud, linux, owncloud, server, sync, ubuntu

ownCloud is a free software alternative to various proprietary web services and it includes file management (with built-in file sharing), music streaming, calendar, contacts and more, all running on your own server. The ownCloud Desktop Client allows synchronizing ownCloud (server) with your computer. To use it, you must firstly install ownCloud on your server.


ownCloud Client 1.7.0 was released a couple of days ago, bringing selective sync support, overlay icons for popular file managers as well as support for some of the new features available in ownCloud 7.

Sync And Collaboration Tool `Seafile` 2.0 Beta Brings New Desktop Syncing Client

| Date: October 22, 2013 | View Comments | Tags: cloud, seafile, server, sync

Seafile is an open source cloud synchronization and collaboration tool which you can install on your own server. The tool uses a version control model somewhat similar to GIT but with some differences such as: automatic syncing, no history stored on the client side so the data is not stored twice (GIT is not efficient with large files), resumable transfers, more user-friendly file conflicts and more.

Dropbox Uploader 0.12 Released [Bash Script To Access Dropbox Via Command Line]

| Date: September 09, 2013 | View Comments | Tags: cli, cloud, dropbox, linux, Raspberry Pi, script, server, ubuntu

Dropbox Uploader is a bash script that allows you to perform various actions on your Dropbox (upload, download, delete, share, etc.) without installing the Dropbox client. This is useful for servers, automatic backups or accessing Dropbox from ARM devices, like Raspberry Pi.

Tiny Tiny RSS 1.9 Available In PPA For Ubuntu 13.04, 12.10 And 12.04

| Date: August 01, 2013 | View Comments | Tags: linux, RSS, server, tiny tiny rss, ubuntu

Tiny Tiny RSS is an open source web-based RSS reader that you can install on a server and then access it from multiple computers/devices. Since it's self-hosted, you're in control of your data and don't have to worry that the service may be discontinued, like it happened with Google Reader (and almost happened with The Old Reader).

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