FYI:  For a different approach, check out Zumero (http://zumero.com) which 
synchronizes SQLite changes within the db rather than the whole db as a file.

Disclosure:  I am a co-founder of Zumero, which is commercial, proprietary, 
non-open-source, etc.  I mention this only because we often describe Zumero as 
"like Dropbox, except for data instead of files", so it might be relevant for 
the participants of this thread.  Apologies if this note is out of line.  Feel 
free to ignore me.  If your initials are DRH, feel free to scold me.

--
E


On Jul 3, 2013, at 9:27 AM, Gerry Snyder <mesmerizer...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 6/27/2013 12:38 PM, joe.fis...@tanguaylab.com wrote:
>> Anyone,
>> 
>> Does anyone have good or bad experiences using a SQLite database in a shared 
>> folder?
>> The 'Dropbox / Drive / SkyDrive / One' ....
> 
> I use Dropbox for SQLite files a lot. If I am not careful to be making 
> changes to a file on only one PC at a time, I can get a "Conflicted copy" on 
> one of the machines, but by and large it has worked very well.
> 
> I can not think of any way Dropbox could be handling things better.
> 
> 
> Gerry
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