Where Is The Download Folder On My Phone

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Ellamae Preli

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Jan 17, 2024, 3:50:28 AM1/17/24
to bicagaghe

If your intention is to sync each phone into one folder on the PC, then you can also do it by creating a single folder on the PC, and then sharing it with all the phones. However, this way all the files will end up being synced with each device, which may not be what you want.

where is the download folder on my phone
Download File: https://t.co/m691XQRtAT

The Syncthing Web GUI on the NAS shows only one folder existing though. To make things simple, what I would do is to add all the required folders to Syncthing on the NAS under different paths first, and then share each of them with a device that you want to sync it with.

My partner has about 50Gb of photos in a single folder on her Android phone and we need to clear some space. When connected to my Windows 10 machine, the folder takes about 10 mins to list. Then when I try and copy the folder or its contents onto my PC, I get an error message about something not found and the process aborts.

I have a folder on my phone that has videos in it from a capture app. Onedrive noticed the folder and started syncing it, which I wanted it to do. Problem is it just dumps all the files into my Camera Roll folder with all the pictures and videos I actually take. Is there any way to sync the phone folder from the app to it's own folder within Onedrive?

The location of your downloaded files will depend on the type of file you have downloaded and the app that you used to download it. Most of your files are organised within the My Files app, however some files will not appear here. Some apps, such as Netflix, store their downloads securely on your phone and are only available through the app itself.

If you can't locate images downloaded from the Google app, make sure your storage permissions are enabled on your device. Find out where the Google app saves downloaded images.

Background: Until a few days ago, I was happy with my Android 2.3 phone, and its Media Storage via USB cable : syncing my computer's D:/MusicLibrary/ folder with my phone's 128GB external SD Card was possible in one line with xxcopy.

With my non-rooted Android 4.2.2, I don't have Media Storage anymore, but only MTP. As mentionned in many other questions, this doesn't give a drive letter anymore by default. The only solutions I see to sync my computer's music library folder with my phone's SD card are very complex now, in comparison to the good-old-Android-2.3-way :

Open the program after connecting the phone > MyPhoneExplorer > files > click on customise (down black solid tringle) a side of Sync files(at the same time, give access to the phone when the pop-up appears to memory, etc.)

The lock screen on your smartphone is an essential barrier to anyone looking to gain access to the device: It stops people from getting at your data, your social media accounts, your banking apps, and everything else.

I downloaded an FTP server app for my phone (WiFi FTP Server), and first tried it with Windows Explorer. It timed out after 30 seconds or so. I then tried, by recommendation from a friend, Filezilla, but it also timed out after 20 seconds... fortunately, I could disable this in the settings, allowing it to load longer, and tadaa, in a few minutes it had loaded the entire camera folder. The copying of the files themselves also seemed to go significantly fasted than via USB. I'm very happy.

For a while, this has bothered me, but with my increasing camera folder size, it's becoming more and more unusable. When I connect my OnePlus 7 Pro phone to my Windows 10 pc to transfer pictures, it takes tens of minutes for Windows Explorer to load the contents of my camera folder. When it's finally done (if it hasn't randomly stopped working in the meantime, which it sometimes does...), the actual transfer speeds also don't seem up to USB 3.0 spec (the phone is connected with a USB 3.0 usb C cable).

I recently ran into this. So oddly enough across all the devices I have this had never been an issue until I went to recently fix something on my wife's phone. Linux, Windows, didn't matter, it didn't like her 1000s of pictures in single folders. It transfered so slow. Even though it literally transfered 30 GB of movies / music fine. The solution for me ended up being ADB. A simple ADB push command and what was saying it would take take hours and hours ended up taking 8 minutes. (adb pull would get it on the PC)

In the OneDrive app, select the check box of the file or files that you want. (For Windows phones, tap and hold the file you want to download, then select the check boxes for any additional files you want.)

I am working on Android Studio and I cannot see my package inside Android>Data folder of my device when I run apk on it. I am unable to run monkey without it. I have also mentioned installLocation="auto" in manifest and gave WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE permission still cannot see my package name.

If you find your Android device is nearly full, open the Settings app and navigate to Storage > Manage Storage to find what is taking space. On Samsung phones, you may find Storage options under the Device Care sub-menu.

My android phone currently syncs the photos I take to some obscure folder on my OneDrive. I want to change it and have my photos and videos saved to another folder.
There is no option on OneDrive app to do it.
Does anyone know how to do that? I presume it is possible because currently the pictures are synced to a folder under many tiers of folders I created, and not some generic folder like MyFiles > Pictures.
Unfortunately Microsoft support doesn't know an answer to that and I am having difficulty contacting OneDrive support.

With Google's Android 8.0 Oreo release, meanwhile, the file manager lives in Android's Downloads app. All you have to do is open that app and select the "Show internal storage" option in its menu to browse through your phone's full internal storage. You can then open, move, rename, copy, delete, and share files as needed.

One little-known feature of Android is its ability to connect with external storage devices like USB memory sticks and even larger-capacity portable hard drives. A phone just has to support something known as USB On-The-Go, or USB OTG, in order for the connection to work.

A fair number of devices, including Google's Pixel phones and many Samsung Galaxy products, offer such support. If you aren't sure if your phone does, your best bet is to Google its name along with "USB OTG"; odds are, you'll find the answer fairly quickly.

Provided your device supports USB OTG, all you need is a USB-A to USB-C adapter like this one made by Amazon. (If you have an older device that doesn't have USB-C, you'll need a USB-A to micro-USB adapter instead; you can find plenty such options on Amazon or at pretty much any electronics retailer.) Use the adapter to plug the external drive into your phone, then look for a notification confirming the drive is connected.

In addition to supporting external hard drives, your Android phone can act as an external hard drive. Just plug your device into any Windows, Mac, or Chrome OS computer, and you can access its entire file system and drag and drop files between it and your desktop with ease.

Do not discuss classified information on unsecure telephones. Official Department of Defense telephones are subject to monitoring for communications security purposes at all times and are provided for the transmission of official government information only. Use of official DoD telephones constitutes consent to communications security telephone monitoring.

Galaxy Z Fold and Galaxy Z Flip models used to be your best choices for foldable phones, but the field is wider now, with Google, OnePlus and Motorola coming out with new phones. In fact, Motorola even makes multiple foldable devices. As a result of this stepped-up competition, the bar for the best foldable phones has been raised. We've even seen the prices on some of these notoriously expensive handsets drop a little bit.

The OnePlus Open is the best foldable you can buy thanks to its ample screen real-estate, excellent performance and overall value. It's $100 less than similar notebook-style foldables from Samsung and Google, which is a step in the right direction given the high prices that these kind of phones demand.

OnePlus didn't cut too many corners to lower the price, as the Open takes excellent photos for the most part. (The exception is in low-light settings.) We also appreciate the Open Canvas multitasking features that let you run multiple apps simultaneously in any size window you want. OnePlus seems to understand that the appealing thing about foldable phones is that they double as tablets and should perform as such.

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