We have already seen the excellent Ifttt (article here: Tutorial: If This, Then That: forcing the web to work for us) as a way of mixing various functions of different web applications with others. Do you need to send Facebook photos to Flickr automatically? Create a backup of photos of Instagram at Dropbox just we raise? Can add Twitter Favorites to Instagram? All this is possible with Ifttt.
Recently came to my attention Wappwolf, which presents a similar idea (automate tasks), but all centered on a main tool: Dropbox or Google Drive.
In fact, Wappwolf existed in the past and her cover at the end of the year. Only that at the time, it was called Dropbox Automator, and carried out fewer tasks (here the original article)
The idea behind Wappwolf is to allow us to automate tasks based on folders that use, with support both for Google Drive, as for Dropbox (and a future, Box.net and Skydrive).
Example: we have a folder called PDF2TXT. Every time we arrojemos a file in PDF format to that folder, Wappwolf her identify and convert PDF files to text:
What can you do?
We have a variety of options. Among them:
automatically convert files to Kindle format
Change of size pictures, add text, and other types of modification. Upload these photos from Picasa, Facebook, Google +, and more.Convert an audio format to another.Upload documents to Google Docsautomatically send file to Kindle, sign PDFsComprimir files, send them by email, send to Evernote, save them to another folder, and much more.
Once we create some automations with Google Drive or Dropbox, Wappwolf help greatly in our productivity, automate common tasks.
Eye: there is a limit of 25 MBs per file
The process of creating automations is super simple. Once identified Dropbox or Google Drive with Wappwolf, choose a folder to use. Instead of using multiple folders, I recommend you use a parent folder (called Automator, or Wappwolf, or whatever you wish).
Within this folder, you can create a sub-folder. If you want to automate uploads of photos on Facebook, for example, create a subfolder called "Facebook". Here they simply throw the files that want to synchronize to their Facebook profiles, and everytime they have photos to upload, rather than opening the browser, log on to Facebook, go to upload photos, simply throw them in the folder created and ready!
We will soon post more useful examples.
Link
via
Dropbox Automator, automating tasks with Dropbox foldersTip: send files to Dropbox, Google Drive, Skydrive or Cubby quicklyTip: get 3 GB extra storage on Dropbox if you use the system of automatic upload photos
Categories: productivity, Tips | Tags: dropbox, google drive, productivity, Tips | Permalink
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