I have a Dropbox folder that I wish to work on with three separate computers (all mine). I want the contents of the folder to also reside on each of these devices, with changes synced to DB. I wish to not depend on always having access to DB so I must have the files on the devices also.
Hi @JeffR18, Yes, Dropbox folder resides in your computer hard drive. The default location is in your Mac home folder. When you are not online, the files would be still available. You are correct about both matters.
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Also bear in mind that our software is designed to watch your Dropbox folder and sync any files placed in the folder meaning that your Dropbox folder is just like any other folder on your hard drive, but with syncing features.
To take advantage of Dropbox, move or copy files into the Dropbox folder. This will place the files into the Dropbox folder. Once Dropbox sees changes in the Dropbox folder, it automatically syncs the new changes to Dropbox servers and to any other computer linked to your account.
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If I click on the icon, and folder, I see everything in my Dropbox. Am I correct that that folder actually resides on my computer? Say something happens and I can no longer access Dropbox, or I am somewhere with no wifi, that folder will still be available?
What I would like to do is have a desktop link on my Mac's to a subfolder within my Dropbox folder that I can click to quickly access frequently used materials. I don't want to search through my entire Dropbox folder each time.
I will try to spare you dear friends more of my incessant ramblings and get straight to the point. Like the scriptural gem I have prepared, I will ATTEMPT to be short and to the point, (though I offer no promises...for my pontificating is valuable and...and okay...I'll shut up now):?
Try this on for size...what does it mean to have a careful attitude? Especially in relation to driving...hmmm...I can now hear the wheels spinning... (some faster than others...but they're all spinning!!) By the way...my wheels spin so slow even hamsters turn down the job because they were all getting fat from a lack of exercise.?
No, as a careful driver... (hopefully a careful driver) ...we constantly and consistently check our mirrors...not out of a preset notion of how often we should check them...but because we understand that if we don't...we could possibly kill ourselves and those traveling with us.
Pray constantly...please, my dear friends...please continue to allow Jehovah to readjust us. None of us will ever regret it...and we are just so close so the end...just allow Jehovah to GET you there.
I like that analogy. If we get into the habit of talking to Jehovah, even for the minutest thing - how this makes us feel, help for making the right choice, forgiveness for our shortcomings, praise for what we see in creation - it will become as natural as checking your mirrors (which we do unconsciously).
Since 2006, JWTalk has proved to be a well-moderated online community for real Jehovah's Witnesses on the web. However, our community is not an official website of Jehovah's Witnesses. It is not endorsed, sponsored, or maintained by any legal entity used by Jehovah's Witnesses. We are a pro-JW community maintained by brothers and sisters around the world. We expect all community members to be active publishers in their congregations, therefore, please do not apply for membership if you are not currently one of Jehovah's Witnesses.
I learned to embroider when I was a kid, when everyone was really into cross stitch (remember the '80s?). Eventually, I migrated to surface embroidery, teaching myself with whatever I could get my hands on...read more
Zooming in on this edge can be a little deceptive. size-wise, but another notable difference is that the acrylic mirrors are slightly thicker than regular shisha mirrors. This makes traditional shisha embroidery over the round or square mirrors a little more difficult.
Another alternative material is shell. I found someone selling bags of mother of purl circles in various sizes. They looked like they may have been rejects from a button factory, some of them. Most were quite nice, though, and looked really nice on a kaki background with cream thread shisha. I suppose you could use buttons and cut off the shank. Like your post suggests, keep your eyes open for things to try.
This reminds me of my college days. I am a doctor by profession but embroidery is my passion. I always used to have a project going and Shisha was one of my favorite. I have done so many of them and in so many different ways too. It is one of the folk art in Paksitan, especially in the interior areas and the ladies of northern areas usually wear Shisha embroidered suits, the shirts are entirely covered with Shisha work and it takes them nearly 6-8 months to complete them. Thank you Mary
I was looking at this stitch just a couple of days ago and here it is in full color! The wheels are turning for using this on an embroidery project that I am starting in the next week or 2. I am new to hand embroidery and I am really having fun with it. I really like the videos on your site-I watch them over and over when I am learning a new stitch.
Thank-you so much for taking the time to have those available. I might be a little (lots) lost without them. Debbie
Though the modes of consumption are very different, linear TV and iPlayer online requests closely mirror each other throughout day. Primetime is still when most want to watch, though other data indicates people watch online primarily alone.
In the iPlayer Performance Pack for March 2014, the BBC continues to chronicle the shift from linear broadcast to online on-demand viewing. However, in both cases the hours between 8 PM and 11 PM continue to be the most popular time to watch. The linear broadcast peak viewing occurs at 9PM, with 25.7M viewers tuning in. Online the peak occurs about an hour later, at 10 PM, with 0.67M simultaneous users. Linear channel viewing continues to dominate during primetime; just 3% of the audience can be found online.
In March 2013, the linear TV peak viewing also occurred at 9 PM with 26.8M viewers, while the online audience also peaked at 10 PM with 0.495M simultaneously viewers. Linear TV viewing and on online streaming seem to be heading in different directions. Over the last year, TV viewing during primetime has declined by 4% while online usage has increased 36%.
Other BBC data indicates that online video is consumed at primetime in a radically different way than linear TV viewing. Though all the linear channels are available to stream through iPlayer, 89% of viewing is on-demand. The ratio between live and on-demand viewing online has changed little over the last year or so, with the exception of during the London Summer Olympics.
Unlike linear television, the TV is not the dominant screen for iPlayer. The iPlayer client is available on popular smart TVs from Samsung, LG, Panasonic, Humax and Toshiba, as well as many Blu-ray players and the Roku Internet set-top box. However, connect TVs and TV devices were responsible for just 4% of requests in March. Game consoles fared a little better with 5% of requests.
The tablet and PC are the most popular platforms to stream iPlayer video. 35% of requests came from PC computers, while 34.5% of requests were made by tablet users. However, the PC is in serious decline as a video streaming platform. Just one year ago, it account for 48.5% of requests and in March 2012, 68%. In March 2012, 9.7% of requests came from tablets and in March 2013 that figure had grown to 23%. By the end of this year, I forecast that the tablet will account for over 40% of online requests, while the PC will have declined to 26%, just ahead of the mobile phone, at 22%.
This is a song I wrote called "World Without Mirrors", about how we see ourselves and how we see each other. With it, I'd like to share a clip from a documentary called Human. T he filmmaker, Yann Arthus-Bertrand, often took helicopter flights to shoot aerial footage of our planet, and one day in Mali, his helicopter broke down. While waiting for repairs, he spent the entire day with a farmer, who spoke to him of his life, hopes, fears and his one ambition: to feed his children. The experience so moved Yann that he spent the next three years interviewing 2,000 women and men in 60 countries, capturing stories and perspectives on the struggles and joys that unite us all.
About Human, the documentary: What is it that makes us human? Is it that we love, that we fight? That we laugh? Cry? Our curiosity? The quest for discovery? Driven by these questions, filmmaker and artist Yann Arthus-Bertrand spent three years collecting real-life stories from 2,000 women and men in 60 countries. Working with a dedicated team of translators, journalists and cameramen, Yann captures deeply personal and emotional accounts of topics that unite us all; struggles with poverty, war, homophobia, and the future of our planet mixed with moments of love and happiness. Watch online (available in English, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic, and French).
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