• 0

Keep folder on PC and folder on laptop in sync?


Question

23 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

I should give you my reason for wanting this solution:

The missus plays The Sims 3 on her low-spec laptop and when I'm out of the house, she wants to play the game on my high-spec PC and continue where she left off. Then, she can quit the

PC one and re-continue on the laptop. So basically, we want to keep the savegame folder synced automatically :)

  • 0

How much data are you talking? If its a few gig or less than yeah I would go with one of the above, dropbox, google, box, etc. Drop for sure has a lan sync so that you don't have to upload and then download again to your other boxes on the same network.

Yes you still sync a copy to the net, but boxes on the local lan just use the local network to sync and don't have to grab the copy from the internet.

Keep in mind that also if your just making changes to files, dropbox atleast only sends the differences. So lets say word document and you go in and make an edit, add a few words - only the changes are sent, not the whole file again.

Unless your talking gigs and gigs of data one of the services is great way to keep your stuff in sync, and also reap the benefits of having a copy in in the cloud for backup, access from other locations - sharing files with others, etc.

edit: Yup any of the solutions should be able to do that for you with nobrainer click and point type solution. Nice about dropbox that save file I would assume gets big, but only minor changes to it need to be synced -- not the whole file again, etc.

  • 0

How much data are you talking? If its a few gig or less than yeah I would go with one of the above, dropbox, google, box, etc. Drop for sure has a lan sync so that you don't have to upload and then download again to your other boxes on the same network.

Yes you still sync a copy to the net, but boxes on the local lan just use the local network to sync and don't have to grab the copy from the internet.

Keep in mind that also if your just making changes to files, dropbox atleast only sends the differences. So lets say word document and you go in and make an edit, add a few words - only the changes are sent, not the whole file again.

Unless your talking gigs and gigs of data one of the services is great way to keep your stuff in sync, and also reap the benefits of having a copy in in the cloud for backup, access from other locations - sharing files with others, etc.

I'm not sure (not at home to check), but the file(s) are likely no larger than 20 MB.

  • 0

I should give you my reason for wanting this solution:

The missus plays The Sims 3 on her low-spec laptop and when I'm out of the house, she wants to play the game on my high-spec PC and continue where she left off. Then, she can quit the

PC one and re-continue on the laptop. So basically, we want to keep the savegame folder synced automatically :)

Theres a few methods here

http://pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/Save_game_cloud_syncing

Is the game installed in Steam? I think steam has cloud save game sync

  • 0

I should give you my reason for wanting this solution:

The missus plays The Sims 3 on her low-spec laptop and when I'm out of the house, she wants to play the game on my high-spec PC and continue where she left off. Then, she can quit the

PC one and re-continue on the laptop. So basically, we want to keep the savegame folder synced automatically :)

Best bet then is to share the save folder on the laptop, map it as the S: drive and make a batch file on the PC to copy it from the share on the laptop to the PC save folder.

  • 0

AeroFS could also be an option - aerofs.com

Technically, AeroFS creates fully decentralized filesystems: All the computers you install AeroFS on contribute to your private filesystem.

Communication happens directly among devices regardless of whether you're on a corporate LAN, on the Internet, or in any other network.

AeroFS can still sync, even when our servers are down.

Try it yourself: Unplug your home network from the internet and watch as AeroFS still happily syncs files across your home computers in this isolated network.

I've really enjoyed using the software and it is now officially live and out of Private Beta since 2nd Aril 2013.

  • 0

There are always multiple ways to skin the cat, sure you could always just copy the files over - use a batch file as suggested. Get some software like sync toy, use rsync, Save the files on a thumb drive and sneaker net them over.

But here's the thing hands down your not going to get simpler than using one of the cloud sync services out there, be it drop, be it google, be it box, be it sugarsync, live drive, etc. etc..

Now I have accounts with most of these, and I like drop the best - it works, its simple! And I have like 70GB of free space with them ;) And I know for sure it has lan sync and works for stuff like this for sure.

Maybe your wife is a power user, I have to assume not or there would be no need for your question in the first place because she would know how to access her saved files across your network, etc. Since that is not the case - clicking a batch file to copy the files over might be stretching her skill set??

Setup dropbox, and forget about it - it will auto keep the files in sync as they change with nobody having to do anything! She can play here game on her lap top, close the game and in a few minutes go over and play it on your PC where she left off. And then back to her laptop and resume how it was last saved on your PC, etc.. Its a NO BRAINER!!

  • 0

clicking a batch file to copy the files over might be stretching her skill set??

If she can click the icon to start Sims, then she can launch a batch file I'd have thought.

Agreed though that DropBox is a no-brainer here.

  • 0

You would think ;) But what if issue with access, what if box is not turned on when she does? What if she is on wireless network across the street, or playing from starbucks, etc. What wireless network is locked down at his place and does not allow access to his wired machines (guest network), what if his machine is off when she pushes the batch file icon, etc.. etc. etc..

With dropbox solution - does not matter what network she is on, if local then will sync local. But she could also be playing while have a latte at coffee house, and when she gets home she can just access the PC and it should already be in sync, etc.

  • 0

Looks like Dropbox is the simplest solution.

However, make sure that she quits the game and waits for the files to sync before firing it up on the other computer. Otherwise you might get conflicts if both instances of the game try to write to the same set of files at the same time. Dropbox will keep conflicted versions of the the same file around, but it's still a PITA to manually resolve conflicts and figure out which file(s) you want to keep.

  • 0

If you wanted to avoid all the proprietary crap you could go ahead and network share then symbolically link them! The days... Otherwise I recommend Drop Box for LAN and Skydrive if you were wanting to use it to host other files.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Time to start going to the local church and play Bingo for a while.
    • NVIDIA announces 35 new AI HPC supercomputers across Europe by Fiza Ali NVIDIA has announced that 35 AI high-performance computing (HPC) supercomputers are planned to open throughout Europe this year. This marks what the company describes as the largest single-year expansion of AI infrastructure in the history of the continent. These new systems, unveiled at ISC High Performance 2026, will be placed at a number of national supercomputing centres, AI factories, and research institutes to provide advanced computing resources to more than three million researchers. Describing AI, NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang stated, "AI is the new instrument of science, and Europe is building the infrastructure to put it in the hands of millions of researchers." Built on NVIDIA's Blackwell and Hopper architectures, the new systems will support research in climate science, healthcare, clean energy, quantum computing, and other scientific fields. Among the major projects are the Barcelona Supercomputing Center's MareNostrum 5 AI upgrade, BavariaAI's Blue Swan platform in Germany, Italy's IT4LIA AI factory, Germany's HammerHAI project, and Sweden's Mimer AI Factory. The Barcelona Supercomputing Center plans to expand MareNostrum 5 with NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 and GB200 NVL4 systems. In total, the BSC expects to deliver up to 20 exaflops of AI training performance and 33 exaflops of AI inference performance. This increased computational capability will support research efforts related to climate modelling, biotechnology, energy systems, etc. Furthermore, as part of the IT4LIA project, more than 8,000 GPUs, each based on NVIDIA’s GB200 NVL4 architecture, will be used in Italy. This represents one of the largest AI factory initiatives announced to date. Additionally, the Blue Swan platform from BavariaAI will include about 1,000 GPUs to help develop multimodal AI models for use in the medical field, robotics, and various areas of scientific research. NVIDIA also emphasized in the announcement how rapidly growth of accelerated computing usage is taking place within both energy and climate-related research. The company said Siemens Energy uses NVIDIA-powered technologies to significantly accelerate the process of designing and simulating hydrogen-capable gas turbines. Using those same acceleration technologies, Siemens was able to reduce simulation time by up to 77 percent. The company also highlighted several quantum computing initiatives across Europe. CINECA, EuroHPC, and Pasqal are integrating a quantum processing unit into Italy's CINECA supercomputing centre using NVIDIA's CUDA-Q platform. Meanwhile, researchers at Germany's Julich Supercomputing Centre recently simulated a universal 50-qubit quantum computer on the JUPITER supercomputer. The announcement demonstrates Europe's continued commitment to building out its infrastructure supporting AI and supercomputing as governments, research organizations, and technology companies compete to build out their respective computing capacities and secure their positions in advanced scientific research.
    • It's about to become harder to turn off your Samsung TV, thanks to Instagram by Aditya Tiwari Meta announced that its Instagram for TV app has arrived on Samsung TVs in the US as part of its latest expansion, giving users one more way to scroll through Reels. The social media giant often comes under scrutiny for the "addictiveness" of its features, which leads people to spend excessive time on the platform. Interestingly, Instagram boss Adam Mosseri described spending 16 hours on the platform as "problematic use" but not "clinical addiction." Mosseri also compared scrolling on Instagram to binge-watching a show on Netflix. Instagram for TV is now available on Samsung TV models released in 2020 or later. The app is already available on Amazon Fire TV and Google TV in the US, which together account for the majority of connected TV devices. The company said it will test several new features to improve the living room and family experience while using Instagram on the big screen. Watching vertical videos on a big screen isn't something many would be excited about. Probably that's why Meta is testing a dedicated home for horizontal videos. Creators will get the opportunity to design content for TV screens and get more ways to reach audiences, according to Meta. If you found an interesting Reel while doomscrolling on your phone, you'll be able to cast it to your TV. The feature is available for testing on Instagram for TV on Google TV and Amazon Fire TV, and it will also support videos from the Saved tab. Instagram for TV will be testing Channels organized around user interests, across genres such as comedy and sports, as well as content from favorite creators. Moreover, you can watch Stories on your TV. While Instagram is known for short-form videos, it's knocking on more doors to keep the audience hooked. The company said it's exploring new content formats for the big screen, including long-form creator content to cover topics in detail, episodic series to build suspense across multiple episodes, and creator live sessions on TV. All of the new updates put Instagram in competition with established giants like YouTube (and Netflix), which already have a robust presence on the big screen. In recent updates, Instagram added the ability to write an individual caption for each carousel image, manually re-order posts, and a paid version of the app.
    • I know RAM and storage prices are high right now, but I think it would have been better to have 1TB as the base level storage, especially as it's supposed to be for gaming. Plus a 2.5gbe ethernet port rather than only 1gbe.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Conversation Starter
      sumytbe earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      B4dM1k3 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      DarkWun earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      513
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      204
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      98
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      82
    5. 5
      neufuse
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!