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Geek Throwdown: How to sync two or more Macs?
Merlin Mann | Oct 12 2007
Enter the OctagonHere’s an experimental new feature: The Throwdown. Take a problem that lots of people face and tell us your personal favorite way to deal with it — in as much detail and with as much persuasion as you can muster. Today, a lot of us are living on two or more Macs -- which is great, except for the challenge of keeping the contents and settings of multiple machines effortlessly in sync. Now before you pop in, holler "dot mac," and jump back on your Segway®, consider that many folks (including your author) are looking for a lot more than simple document syncing and perfunctory preference sharing. How about if your needs are more nuanced:
You get the idea. You have a system; now tell us about it. Bow to your sensei, then spare no detail. How do you sync your Macs?rsync? ChronoSync? Synchronize? Unison? Something you made yourself? What are using to sync your Macs, and how are you using it? 80 Comments
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Unison FTWSubmitted by Merlin on October 12, 2007 - 8:06am.
I imagine that the apps mentioned in the post will tip people to what I have tried. :-) So far, I've found the most success with Unison, which I setup on two machines with great assistance from Ethan Schoonover. It was working pretty well for me, but three pilot errors I had were frustrating:
I've temporarily abandoned Unison while using [thing under NDA], but I plan to return soon. I contend that if someone comes up a truly easy-to-use GUI front end to Unison, it might be game over -- the feature set is just so powerful, especially when using a remote server + something to automate backups. In the end, I think all these apps are awesome and powerful, but they're also almost all a huge pain to configure and update. That's why a lot of people satisfice with .Mac, IMO. » POSTED IN:
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