Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Academy | Newsletter | Subscribe | Shop |
Departments

Partner Links
Make your own website
WinWeb OnlineOffice
Comparing prices of hardware is worth it.
Price Comparison
UK Linux Jobs
What:
Where:
Country:
vacatures Netherlands njobs Linux vacatures
arbeit Deutschland njobs Linux arbeit
work United Kingdom njobs Linux jobs
Lavoro Italia njobs Linux lavoro
Emploi France njobs Linux emploi
trabajo Espana njobs Linux trabajo

user friendly

Admin Magazine

ADMIN Network & Security

Subscribe now and save!

ADMIN - Explore the new world of system administration! Special introductory offer! Order by September 30th to save 10% off the regular subscription price! Each issue delivers technical solutions to the real-world problems you face every day. Learn the latest techniques for better:

  • network security
  • system management
  • troubleshooting
  • performance tuning
  • virtualization
  • cloud computing

 

on Windows, Linux, Solaris, and popular varieties of Unix.

http://www.admin-magazine.com/

  linux-magazine.com » Online » Blogs » Productivity Sauce » Tomdroid: A Tomboy Client for Android  

Productivity Sauce
Productivity Sauce

Tomdroid: A Tomboy Client for Android

Tomboy is a handy little note-taking tool that sports a few nifty features, including the ability to upload notes to a remote server and sync them between different machines. And now you can put your Tomboy notes on an Android device courtesy of Tomdroid. This no-frills app acts as a note viewer, so you can't edit notes directly on the Android device. Still, the Tomdroid can be useful if you want to keep your notes handy.

Tomdroid is not available via the Android Market, so you have to install the latest .apk package from the project's Web site. The app expects to find all Tomboy notes in the /sdcard/tomdroid directory which you have to create manually. The easiest way to do this is to use your computer to create the tomdroid folder on the SD card used with your Android device. You can then copy the Tomboy notes (.note files stored in the ~/.tomboy directory on your machine) into the created tomdroid folder. In addition to that, Tomdroid allows you to grab .note files from the Web. Of course, both of these approaches lack the simplicity and convenience of a dedicated synchronization feature, but hopefully future versions of the app will fix that. For now, if you want to keep your Tomboy handy, and you don't mind manually transferring them to your Android device, then you might want to give Tomdroid a try.

Comments


Print this page. Recommend
Share