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I tried to take data from my pc to laptop. Both are using ubuntu 11.10 os. I googled and tried to connect both the systems. Now it is showing connected symbol. Dont know how to proceed further. I need to take data from my pc using this lan connection. Please provide me solution for this...

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  • Open file manager , at the left you will find Network menu , try Browse Network .
    – atenz
    Jul 14, 2012 at 17:00
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    Have you tried File >> Connect to Server (and choose SSH), from either of the PCs to the other? This will provide a GUI method to drag-and-drop files between the two. Do you want a shared directory? What are you trying to achieve?
    – david6
    Jul 14, 2012 at 22:09

3 Answers 3

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You can always try this:

  1. On the folder you want to share, right click :

Right Click

  1. Check the Share this button

enter image description here

  1. Say yes to install additional software

  2. Finally, click on Create Share to share the folder; the folder’s icon will look like the following:

enter image description here

Now everything is done. To access the shared folder through other computers of the network, just open up Nautilus, in the left sidebar click on Browse Network then choose the name of the computer in which the folder is shared and you will see it.

enter image description here

Source

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There is a Ubuntu guide on setting up Samba for file sharing.

It is possible that things will work by default , out of the box, as long as you have user accounts setup properly on both Ubuntu machines. Otherwise, you need to read the guide and figure it out yourself.

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You can share folders through Ubuntu, or use a cloud solution like Dropbox. If you use Dropbox, all you need is an internet connection

  1. Install Dropbox on your pc for example
  2. Upload your files to your Dropbox folder,
  3. Install Dropbox on your laptop
  4. Retrieve your files in your Dropbox folder

A similar solution and a native one for Ubuntu is Ubuntu One, it's the same principle that Dropbox, but it's already installed on your Ubuntu. If you want to know how to do the same thing but using Ubuntu One there's an excellent guide here

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  • This solution has the disadvantage of using an intermediate server over the internet, which can be slow, or even impossible, depending on the volume of the shared data. Jul 14, 2012 at 16:52
  • While this solution is a cute answer its not really a "Linux" solution to the problem. I don't think it would qualify as a solid answer.
    – djangofan
    Jul 14, 2012 at 16:54
  • In deed if it's a lot of data, it can be slow. I use Dropbox with something like 4GB and it works pretty well, and i don't even have a great internet connection. It wasn't specified the amount of data to transfer.
    – LnxSlck
    Jul 14, 2012 at 16:55
  • @MariosZindilis if both of the computers are in the same LAN that is not true since dropbox supports LAN synchronisation
    – byf-ferdy
    Jul 29, 2013 at 10:04
  • LAN Sync in Dropbox only prevents downloading of changed files from Dropbox servers, Upload still needs to go to the cloud once. Dropbox therefore binds your solution to an internet connection and creates a bottleneck the size of your bandwidth. Aug 2, 2013 at 5:14

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