On Tuesday 11 November 2008 22:08, H.S. wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am in a situation where a friend of mine wants to send tons of photos
> to me. Internet connection being what it is regarding stability, I am
> aiming to a method where the photos' transfer can be resumed if the
> connection breaks and
On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 11:06:37AM +0200, Aioanei Rares wrote:
>
> Why not ask him to install PuTTY for SSH ?
Or even easier for file transferral: winscp or filezilla.
Regards
Johann
--
Johann Spies Telefoon: 021-808 4036
Informasietegnologie, Universiteit van Stellenbosch
"Moreo
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 2:08 AM, H.S. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am in a situation where a friend of mine wants to send tons of photos
> to me. Internet connection being what it is regarding stability, I am
> aiming to a method where the photos' transfer can be resumed if the
> conn
Had anyone mentioned Webmin ??
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> But winscp has an option to skip over duplicate files. If you start
> the transfer again with this option set winscp will hop over the
> files that have already been transferred and pick up where it left
> off. Admittedly this does cause some time penalty while wins
>
>
>
> Original Message
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
>Subject: Re: Windows to Debian secure data transfer over internet
>Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2008 21:59:10 -0500
>
>>Paul Cartwright wrote:
>>> On Tue November 11 200
On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 6:08 PM, H.S. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am in a situation where a friend of mine wants to send tons of photos
> to me. Internet connection being what it is regarding stability, I am
> aiming to a method where the photos' transfer can be resumed if the
> conne
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
>
> You could have him burn the photos in a DVD, then you drive over to his
> place, grab the DVD, and copy them to your machine.
>
> Depending on how far he lives, this might even be faster than
> transferring via Internet.
>
>
That would have been the obvious cho
H.S. escreveu:
> Hello,
>
> I am in a situation where a friend of mine wants to send tons of photos
> to me. Internet connection being what it is regarding stability, I am
> aiming to a method where the photos' transfer can be resumed if the
> connection breaks and is recreated.
>
> Keeping securit
On Tue, 11 Nov 2008 19:33:11 -0500
"H.S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Rico Secada wrote:
>
> >
> > Unless there is any pressing need for you to use SSH, I would
> > recommend
>
> It is for encryption. I have no idea what my ISP does with my data and
> moreover I just don't plain like idea of s
Paul Cartwright wrote:
> On Tue November 11 2008, H.S. wrote:
>> For now what I have in mind is this:
>> 1. Ask him to make archive volumes of the data, say 10 MB each.
>> 2. Ask him to install the GUI scp client on his windows box.
>> 3. Create account for him on my Debian router machine.
>> 4. As
Paul Cartwright wrote:
> On Tue November 11 2008, H.S. wrote:
>> For now what I have in mind is this:
>> 1. Ask him to make archive volumes of the data, say 10 MB each.
>> 2. Ask him to install the GUI scp client on his windows box.
>> 3. Create account for him on my Debian router machine.
>> 4. As
Paul Cartwright wrote:
> On Tue November 11 2008, H.S. wrote:
>> For now what I have in mind is this:
>> 1. Ask him to make archive volumes of the data, say 10 MB each.
>> 2. Ask him to install the GUI scp client on his windows box.
>> 3. Create account for him on my Debian router machine.
>> 4. As
Rico Secada wrote:
>
> Unless there is any pressing need for you to use SSH, I would recommend
It is for encryption. I have no idea what my ISP does with my data and
moreover I just don't plain like idea of somebody going over our family
photos. That is the main reason.
Thanks.
--
Please re
H.S. wrote:
Hello,
I am in a situation where a friend of mine wants to send tons of photos
to me. Internet connection being what it is regarding stability, I am
aiming to a method where the photos' transfer can be resumed if the
connection breaks and is recreated.
Keeping security in mind, I am
On Tue November 11 2008, H.S. wrote:
> For now what I have in mind is this:
> 1. Ask him to make archive volumes of the data, say 10 MB each.
> 2. Ask him to install the GUI scp client on his windows box.
> 3. Create account for him on my Debian router machine.
> 4. Ask him to start scp transfer of
On 11/11/08 18:08, H.S. wrote:
[snip]
Now I wanted to know what is the best way to go about this. He is not a
computer savvy and does not use Linux. Otherwise I would have just asked
him to send it over rsync via ssh.
Savvy or not, is he amenable to rote learning?
--
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferso
On Tue, 11 Nov 2008 19:08:33 -0500
"H.S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am in a situation where a friend of mine wants to send tons of
> photos to me. Internet connection being what it is regarding
> stability, I am aiming to a method where the photos' transfer can be
> resumed if the
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