Toby Corkindale <[email protected]> wrote:
 
> Thanks for the suggestion. I could also use mtpfs, or adb push.

Yes, exactly, with shell wildcards, a find command or whatever is needed to
transfer the files all at once.
> 
> However I'm specifically after an easy-to-use solution appropriate for 
> someone who uses desktop environments.

I suppose you mean someone who uses desktop environments and who doesn't know
shell commands well enough to perform the task (most people run desktop
environments, even if only minimal ones and even if they spend much of their
time at the shell prompt). Then add a stipulation that the user isn't willing
to learn the said shell commands, despite the time that would be saved
compared with manually selecting and transferring the files.

for that kind of user, frankly, I'd recommend staying with Windows, OSX or
whatever they're familiar with. This is not a criticism of Linux, implicitly
or explicitly, just a recognition that different systems are best suited for
different users and different use cases - and that's fine, in my view. I
suppose I never joined the "let's make Linux suitable for non-technical
end-users" crowd, for a variety of reasons, and so I don't judge the success
of Linux on the basis of whether it ever succeeds in that role, which at this
point it may not, except in the form of highly customized systems such
as Android, or perhaps Plasma or Ubuntu for mobile and similar efforts if they
gain hardware support.

For people who want or need a good UNIX-like environment, whether on the
desktop, laptop or server, it's great and will continue to be so, while
providing all the advantages of being free software/open-source. It's also an
excellent environment for new users to discover new and different ways of
working, and those include the shell as well as all of the different desktop
environments/window managers on offer and, in general, the great diversity
that can be seen in any large Linux distribution - but it requires someone who
is curious and willing to learn in order to benefit from that freedom and to
make those choices.

And yes, there probably is and should be a way to transfer those files from a
graphical file manager - I'm not the best qualified to answer the question
posed.

_______________________________________________
luv-main mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.luv.asn.au/listinfo/luv-main

Reply via email to