And I can set up as many shared folders as I want, in any location on my Macs. It’ll sync directly from one Mac to another over my local network without needing to upload everything to a server first. Resilio also offers a couple of nice benefits. Resilio handles symbolic links the way that I consider to be correct. Often the services would have other faults, but this test fails so frequently that it’s the first thing I try when evaluating a sync system. Most sync services fail this in one way or another. Some would (and have) argued against this as the right way to do things. Instead it follows the links, which can cause duplicate files. My only real technical gripe with Dropbox is that it won’t copy symbolic links as symbolic links. Reasons varied, but I found that the quickest test of a sync system was checking how it handled symbolic links. I looked at a variety of sync options and rejected most of them. But I’d prefer to keep things more directly under my control if possible. It’s not exactly the same situation since files on Dropbox still exist on my Mac. It won’t disappear because some company has been aqui-hired by another one or whatever. It does more or less the same thing but I control where my data goes. For example, rather than rely on Cloud App to quickly share files online, these days I prefer Dropshare with my own server. I want files to sync between Macs, and that’s it.įor a variety of reasons I’ve been moving toward having direct control over my online data instead of using external services. ![]() ![]() Dropbox has built a bunch of other stuff onto their service, but I don’t care about any of that. I get a folder on my Mac that transparently syncs to my other Mac. Their original feature is the only one I’ve ever cared about. In this post I’ll describe how to set up Resilio to get a Dropbox-like experience. With my Dropbox subscription up for renewal in a couple of weeks, now’s the time. It’s gradually improved to where I think I can rely on it. Over the past year or so I’ve been trying out Resilio Sync (formerly BitTorrent Sync) as a possible alternative to Dropbox.
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