The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to salinmooch For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-11-23
, 22:07
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Posts: 2,853 |
Thanked: 968 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#2
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2009-11-23
, 23:37
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Posts: 4,556 |
Thanked: 1,624 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#3
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2009-11-24
, 14:51
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Posts: 39 |
Thanked: 26 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
@ On the wasatch front, UT USA
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#4
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2009-11-24
, 16:06
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Posts: 2,853 |
Thanked: 968 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#5
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2009-11-24
, 16:39
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#6
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In short, running the python script on a file will start a simple webserver and produce an address you can pass on to a friend in place of emailing it, waving it or dropboxing it. That friend on your local network can drop that address in a browser or use a command like wget and grab the file; the server shuts down and everyone is happy. It also will take a directory, zip, tar/gzip or tar/bzip2 it up and send that along too.
I use this with my wife sometimes on my n800 when we are on our home network, working together and I'm to lazy to drop a file on our shared server. It's a bit more handy when out and about at a coffee shop or library and we need to quickly share something larger than would be reasonable with bluetooth. It works well with all the unixes I tried it on, including my maemo device (n800). Since the Maemo 4 telephony does not support file transfers (I think) I can just use woof to do a transfer while chatting locally with bonjour.
Obviously there are a million and one ways of moving files and directories about, but I like the bare simplicity and utility of this on a local network.
I dropped it into a directory in my path chmod'ed it was good to go. I am not sure what dependencies it needs as my tablet is not handy. I can check if anyone want to use it but can't. If I had the skill or the time it would be cool to see this GUI send option in a file manager of some sort.