With cloudHQ Chrome extension you can setup synchronization and replication of any of your data between your Google Docs, Dropbox, Basecamp and other cloud services, directly from a Google Docs interface.              

  • Easy set up synchronization or replication of your Google Docs files or collections with Dropbox, Basecamp, or SugarSync. You can even sync with another Google Docs account in seconds!

  • Sync your Dropbox, Basecamp, or SugarSync files and folders (Box.net and Evernote sync coming soon!) with Google Docs with a few clicks! For example, you can replicate a newly shared Dropbox folder or document directly into Google Docs.

  • Check the status and get a list of latest synchronized files directly from your Chrome extension - no need to visit cloudHQ.net!

Click here to install it.

Set It and Forget It: Continuos and Real Time Synchronization between Dropbox and Basecamp

Here is how to ensure that all your Basecamp projects are also on Dropbox secure servers and on your computer (PC or Mac). An you can also upload files into Basecamp project but just adding files to Dropbox folder. Easy.

http://blog.cloudhq.net/post/9960523835/set-it-and-forget-it-real-time-synchronization

Synchronize files and documents between Google Docs and SharePoint?

If you are interested, click here: http://www.sharepointgoogledocs.com/

Review of cloudHQ on saas-app.fr

One short review about cloudHQ:

http://www.saas-app.fr/allcat/document/cloudhq-synchronisation-fichiers/

And translation from English:

http://translate.google.com/translate?js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.saas-app.fr%2Fallcat%2Fdocument%2Fcloudhq-synchronisation-fichiers&act=url

Go to http://cloudHQ.net to learn more.

Article about cloudHQ on lifehacker.ru

http://lifehacker.ru/2011/06/26/cloudhq-fajjlovyjj-menedzher-dlya-google-docs-dropbox-sugarsync-i-basecamp/

[Flash 10 is required to watch video]

Tags: maker faire

Maker Faire

Maker Faire

 “Can anyone innovate like Apple?”  The simple answer: While anyone can learn the principles that drive Apple’s innovation, few businesses have the courage to do so.  It takes courage to reduce the number of products a company offers from 350 to 10, as Jobs did in 1998.  It takes courage to remove a keyboard from the face of a smartphone and replace those buttons with a giant screen, as Jobs did with the iPhone.  It takes courage to eliminate code from an operating system to make it more stable and reliable, as Apple did with Snow Leopard.  It takes courage to feature just one product on the home page of a Web site as Apple does with each new major product launch.  It takes courage to make a product like the iPad that is so simple a child can use it.