• fido in sync with multiple devices

    From August Abolins@2:221/360 to Tony Langdon on Wed Jan 13 12:19:06 2021
    On 06/04/2019 6:57 p.m., Tony Langdon : Dale Shipp wrote:

    .. But there's already options that work well for those who used
    desktop or laptop PCs as their primary or even only messaging device
    - Can anyone say "point system? For me, that's a no brainer :) ).
    But nothing really well suited to people who have multiple devices,
    some PCs, some mobile.

    The closest thing that works for me is using the nntp approach. I can work with messages at either my desktop or laptop. Most of the time those machines are never in the same location.

    But the method lacks the ability to:

    [1] save a reply-in-progress at one device, and resume with it at another device before actually sending it off.

    [2] mark/tag messages for reply at one device, and see the same mark/tag at another device.

    Is that the ability you wanted?

    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.
    * Origin: - nntp://rbb.fidonet.fi - Lake Ylo - Finland - (2:221/360)
  • From mark lewis@1:3634/12.73 to August Abolins on Wed Jan 13 12:19:06 2021
    On 2019 Apr 07 20:10:08, you wrote to Tony Langdon:

    The closest thing that works for me is using the nntp approach. I can
    work with messages at either my desktop or laptop. Most of the time
    those machines are never in the same location.

    But the method lacks the ability to:

    you forget about the lastread pointers... news clients keep up with the lastread pointers themselves... not the BBS or news server... so you have to manually sync the lastread pointers on each device...

    [1] save a reply-in-progress at one device, and resume with it at
    another device before actually sending it off.

    you can get this if the BBS offers the ability to save drafts... at least one BBS that i know of does this now if the connection is lost while writing a message... it only offers one draft, though, and you have to continue it immediately when you reconnect...

    )\/(ark

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    Do you manage your own servers? If you are not running an IDS/IPS yer doin' it wrong...
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    * Origin: (1:3634/12.73)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/360 to mark lewis on Wed Jan 13 12:19:06 2021
    On 07/04/2019 2:02 p.m., mark lewis : August Abolins wrote:

    you forget about the lastread pointers... news clients keep up with the lastread pointers themselves... not the BBS or news server...
    Ya.. the lastread pointer issue! For now, the volume of mail (in fidonet) is not too much of a bother to keep up with or see previously read messages. But I can certainly appreciate the matter.

    I found the following discussion about this problem:

    -= 8< =-
    Before the update to feedly 16 everything was perfectly in sync: When I read everything new in Firefox I could open feedly on my Android device and got the "you read everything ..." message - perfect! When there were new feeds and I read them on Android I did not get them as unread on Firefox later.

    However, since the update to feedly 16 this changed. Now stuff I read in Firefox does not show up as already-read on Android and vice versa. That's super annoying and actually this kind of syncing is the reason I started using feedly in the first place - when reading feeds at home, at work and from mobile it's very important to keep read items in sync. Especially with high-volume feeds such as 9gag.

    1,846 votes
    ThiefMaster shared this idea · Jun 17, 2013
    -= 8< =-

    Since 2013, it looks like the "problem" at feedly has been solved.


    so you have to manually sync the lastread pointers on each device...
    How do you do the manual syncing with Thunderbird nntp areas? Auto-syncing works with email/IMAP across clients, but the only thing marked "sync" for nntp is "Download" messages. :( ..and that ain't gonna help when I want to resume reading with another client for the account/server.


     AA> [1] save a reply-in-progress at one device, and resume with it at
     AA> another device before actually sending it off.

    you can get this if the BBS offers the ability to save drafts... at
    least one BBS that i know of does this now if the connection is lost
    while writing a message... it only offers one draft, though, and you
    have to continue it immediately when you reconnect...

    I remember seeing that at a few BBSes, in the past.
    Worked great over the tender dialup.

    I wonder if this might work:

    Client #1 (laptop)
    - connect to server
    - fetch new messages
    - disconnect
    - read, create replies or save drafts for later resume
    - reconnect to server, BUT, only send sync:data "update LOCALLY READ markers and draft status" on messages in progress.
    - disconnect.

    Client #2 (tablet)
    - connect to server
    - request "sync:data" from session with #1 above.
    - fetch messages from where you left off from #1 above, BUT INCLUDE any UNREAD messages that have not been confirmed with sync:data above (this is the key, unlike QWK, for example).
    - disconnect
    - resume read/write.
    - reconnect, send sync:data
    - disconnect

    Client #1 (laptop)
    - connect to server
    - request "sync:data" from session with #2 above.
    - fetch messages from where you left off from #2 above.
    - disconnect

    ...and so on.

    .../|ug

    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.
    * Origin: - nntp://rbb.fidonet.fi - Lake Ylo - Finland - (2:221/360)
  • From Charles Pierson@1:106/127 to August Abolins on Wed Jan 13 14:57:44 2021
    On 13 Jan 2021, August Abolins said the following...
    .. But there's already options that work well for those who used
    desktop or laptop PCs as their primary or even only messaging device
    - Can anyone say "point system? For me, that's a no brainer :) ).
    But nothing really well suited to people who have multiple devices,
    some PCs, some mobile.

    The closest thing that works for me is using the nntp approach. I can
    work with
    messages at either my desktop or laptop. Most of the time those machines are never in the same location.

    What's the difference between nntp and a point set up or telnet/qwk?

    Any one of those can be used from multiple devices in multiple locations.

    So what draws you to one over the others?
    But the method lacks the ability to:

    [1] save a reply-in-progress at one device, and resume with it at
    another device before actually sending it off.

    [2] mark/tag messages for reply at one device, and see the same mark/tag at another device.

    Is that the ability you wanted?

    Other than using an OLMR with the packets on a portable storage device of
    some sort, or saving a draft on a BBS whike ysing Telnet, I don't think any option lets yoy do those.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Raspberry Pi/32)
    * Origin: theoasisbbs.ddns.net:1357 (1:106/127)