I use onedrive to store all my photos, the space for all these photos is over 80G. I use a yoga 11s with an 128GB SSD. So there is no way for me to sync all my photos to my pc.
Is there any way to browse photos from onedrive only, without downloading? Or is there any other album apps in the MS store?
Thanks for helping! New to win8.1 :P
Since you're using Windows 8.1, you should see all the files in your OneDrive, even if they aren't downloaded locally to your computer. In Explorer you should see these files as "Online Only" indicating they are only available when you are online and connected to the internet.
Various applications should be able to interact with these files, like the Photos app in Windows. This way you can browse all of your photos without keeping them on your laptop.
Related
I made a website that links to files loaded on google drive. Its a basic website and you can navigate to different sections and then access pdf files and images that are stored on a google drive. I need to figure out a way to make this be usable offline. I was thinking of just copying the whole website to a thumbdrive. However I dont know a way to make the external google files work offline. Is there a easy way to do this?
I need to be able to allow users to choose a folder on their computer and upload the whole contents to a web site.
It needs to be cross browser and platform compatible. HTML5 can be required.
I have read a lot about the limitations of the different browsers and that Chrome is the only one that really allows folder uploads.
I can place some requirements on the users, but not a lot.
I have also looked at JSZip and thought about zipping the client folder before uploading, but don't know how to get the selected folder from the user.
I forgot that I had posted this question and asked it differently recently. There was an answer posted. Here is that thread:
Browser Folder Uploading
I want to know how can i upload my webplayer game to Google drive. I see several game are working on Google drive my games are uploaded to dropbox but i also want to upload on google drive
Follow this tutorial for hosting a webpage on google drive:
https://support.google.com/drive/answer/2881970?hl=en
Complete steps:
Upload a folder with your build (.html and .unity3d file) on google drive
Share this folder with "anyone on the internet". Right click -> Share -> Advanced -> Public on the web -> Done
Get shareable link of your html file (inside shared folder). Right click -> Share -> Get shareable link
Copy the ID from this link (which looks like this https://drive.google.com/file/d/[here_goes_your_id]/view?usp=sharing) to this template: https://googledrive.com/host/[here_goes_your_id] which will be the link to your game.
Now you can't.
Beginning August 31, 2015, web hosting in Google Drive for users and developers will be deprecated. Google Apps customers can continue to use this feature for a period of one year until August 31, 2016, when serving content via googledrive.com/host/doc id will be discontinued.
Source
I need to make an offline browser on ios, which should persistent the specified webpages to the disk with the media resource such as image,css,js. At the same time, the offline browser should be able to download mutiple levels of the website automaticly, for example, make it download the webpage and all the pages linked in this webpage.
I've tried the ASIWebpageRequest,but it is not satisfying, and can not download muti levels.
Are there any other way to implement this perfectly?Can AFNetworing or MKNetworkKit do this?
Thank you very very much!
I tried to upload files via FTP but ran into problems. Are modern day browsers no longer supporting FTP "write" capability? I managed to use Dreamweaver to FTP the files successfully.
I can't find anything anywhere about FTP uploading in Internet Explorer past version 6. My guess is that they are limiting support for it (standard FTP) due to its lack of security.
Tons of sites still link to downloads on FTP servers, so we will continue to see browsers support FTP downloads for a long time. As for uploading, the trend seems to be that you should have a dedicated client now, which makes the security concerns less transparent. I second the FileZilla recommendation.
Maybe someday we'll see FTPS support in browsers.
Update: I tried FTP Upload with IE8. It displayed a hyperlinked list of files, but had this message at the top: "To view this FTP site in Windows Explorer, click Page, and then click Open FTP Site in Windows Explorer." I followed those instructions and I was able to upload and download in Windows Explorer. I guess that is how it works now, whereas IE 6 had it integrated.
It sounds like a problem with whatever web interface is provided by the server. Try a dedicated FTP client like Filezilla.