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JOTTACLOUD NO ARCHIVE
(unless you use rclone on Windows, too, and turn the archive folder into a sync folder) Otherwise, one might have been able to use rclone to get sync functionality on Linux. I set up rclone with Jottacloud (mounted it on my server which runs Ubuntu), but this only lets me access the “Archive” folder, not the sync folder. Furthermore, the photo album shows me files I have already deleted – they can’t be viewed, but they are still shown as a gray picture in the photo album. Worst of all, the “album” doesn’t work well, meaning you see ALL your pictures and videos in one place, which is obviously ridiculous (album art with year 1970 unix time stamp, all your screenshots mixed in with your vacation photos). The app allows you to “scan” a document with your phone camera, but the result is very poor (black and white, grainy).
JOTTACLOUD NO DOWNLOAD
The mobile app (Android/iOS) is focused on uploading photos and videos so you can free up storage on your phone, not on syncing files, although you can upload and download individual files. There is no sync client for Linux (but for Mac), only a CLI tool to backup a folder. No sync folder on Linux, mediocre mobile app for photos / videos
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You can move files between the archive and the sync folder, but not between them and the backup folders. The archive is basically just a file locker/storage. There is a sync folder to synchronize across all your devices, you can continuously backup a folder and restore it (up to 5 file versions stored), and you can archive files. Jottacloud has typical features that you would expect. Hence, I’d say anywhere from 8TB to 15TB is a realistic amount you can store on Jottacloud. At the 10TB / 6 mbit/s cap it will take you two weeks to upload another terabyte (using one simultaneous connection). Then it remains at 1 mbit/s until you delete files. As you upload more, the upload speed is reduced further in small decrements to 6 mbit/s at 10TB stored and 1 mbit/s at 20TB. Without trying it, I assume that this is per connection/device, so it would not severely limit your experience. Currently, upload speeds are throttled when you have more than 5TB of data stored.Īfter 5TB, a 20 mbit/s upload speed cap kicks in. The company has repeatedly adjusted its terms over the years to respond to people abusing the service. However, the “unlimited” cloud storage you receive in return is not actually unlimited. Jottacloud only charges about 5 Euros a month (about 6 US-Dollars) when you select Norway as your country and pre-pay for a year. Advertisement Incredible value, even though it’s not actually unlimited
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