Hello,
I am doing some experiments with Google Drive on a Nexus 7. My idea would be to use it to read PDF documents, annotate and highlight them and sync them back into the cloud.
Last week, we caught a blog post that Google wasn’t supposed to publish yet. In it, the company announced that it would soon bring editing features to the Google Drive app for iOS. Today, Google made these updates official and Google Drive for iPhone and iPad does now indeed allow you to edit documents, just as you can already do with the Android app.
I just got a Note 10.1. It's pretty neat, but I'm having issues saving things to cloud services. On my windows laptop, using Dropbox and Google Drive creates a folder for their files.
I can't seem to find an answer to this question, and maybe it's not possible but than someone could explain to me why it isn't.
I use dropbox to sync my work (in this case, my PhD) between laptop/pc/work both on my PC and on my laptop I run Fedora 18. I have used the Documents folder for stuff that isn't really critical to have synced, and I love how it's integrated in the Shell/Documents app.
I just tried it myself and it does not work either. What I did was creating an OpenOffice odt document inside of ~/Documents but it will not get synced with my Google Drive.
I somehow moved my documents folder from the its original place (home) to my desktop, now on my desktop it has the documents icon and if I click on my documents library it opens up. But I don't want it their and when I move it back to home it looks just like a regular file folder and when I click on my documents library it says, Could not find "/home/jordiston/Desktop/Documents".
I think that the time is ripe to have my whole Ubuntu synchronized just as my Dropbox folder is.
Given that we are always talking about files and directories, what's the difference between my Documents folder and my /usr system directory?
Is there any way for Gnome Documents to access and display documents (HTML/DOCX/ODT) on an External USB Hard Drive? I'm running Ubuntu Gnome 13.04 in a Virtual Machine with the drive connected to it, but Documents doesn't seem to index the drive by default and there's no visible option to make it search the drive.
I recently installed Ubuntu(Oneiric) with Wubi allocating about 20 GB of space to the virtual disk.I have three partitions in my hard disk C,D and E.My windows is stored in C drive while my Ubuntu is installed in the D Drive.
I am a user of Dropbox and currently my files are synced to the Dropbox folder in my documents in C Drive.I am afraid that if I install Dropbox in Ubuntu,it will unnecessari