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What I'm saying is that FTP was not created for that, but the apps you've mentioned have wrangled it into that purpose.
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the wrong kind of marketing
i have to agree with nic here. it's unbelievable that they would leave write access out of the finder for ftp volumes. definitely idisk marketing, and really quite frustrating. idisk is great, but not for everyone. some of us have a variety of web server account, or our own servers, and why should we be denied the ability to access these (full access) via the finder?
oh well, not that anyone here disagrees with me. |
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FYI: There are other ways that you can reproduce the iDisk functionality on your own server if you want. A few web sites have published instructions. |
Rfc 959
The specification for the File Transfer Protocol, for those who are technically inclined. ;)
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As with the abysmal fonts situation in Mac OSuX compared with Mac OS 9, TheWormyFruit™ has made life miserable for their bread-and-butter, viz. graphic design, desktop publishing and prepress, by making it impossible to upload files with Finder FTP to their service bureau. Apple is shooting themselves in the foot and only fostering further migration to Windoze in the publishing industry with this nonsense. Prepress trade shops and printing presses receive files on their own FTP servers, not on a frigging iDisk!
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I wasn't aware that you could do ftp using the classical Finder, instead of requiring 3rd party apps like Fetch or Transmit or Interarchy.
Is there documentation on how to do that somewhere? |
I did not intend to imply that the Mac OS 9 Finder could do FTP; I was only trying to say that in a large number of respects, Apple has forsaken its desktop publishing niche by the retrogression of usability, functionality and dumbed-down or outright removed features in the transition to Mac OSuX. The *new* feature of Finder FTP in Mac OSuX - without upload capability - is an insolent slap in the face to the publishing industry.
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So, you are implying that the people in the publishing industry lack the wherewithal to go download a 3rd party application exactly like they would have had to do in the past?
I submit anyone who can figure out how to use Photoshop and XPress is a little sharper tack than that. At least I'd like to hope so. edit - By the way, if this thread degenerates into an offtopic rant fest it'll be closed. |
No, of course people can go download and pay for an FTP utility that is less convenient than the Finder's built-in FTP. But the point is that the Finder's FTP is much nicer, easier and user-friendly than anything else ... except that Apple artificially crippled it and disabled upload for no good reason.
As for rants, Apple has made things so much more user-hostile that there's no avoiding it at every turn. I've been in prepress for ten years and I'm fed up; it didn't have to be this way! All we ever wanted was a Mac OS 9-type experience with preemptive multitasking and memory protection, not the degraded workflow we suffer now. Macs used to enjoy a GISTICS-measured advantage over Windoze in return on investment of some $24,000 per year per seat. Mac OSuX still is better than Windoze, but the gap has narrowed markedly, and it's costing us! "... We've seen Apple try to sell cost of ownership ... and it doesn't work." — Steve Jobs, 2002 Apple annual shareholder's meeting "... I have occasional phone calls to Steve Jobs; sometimes, we'll get together for lunch. He might ask me a few questions about what do I think about that, how are we doing here. I let him know what I really want or I'll list bugs in a new product. "But it's funny because, sometimes, I'll report something that's serious -- just not working -- like [a new drive] just doesn't work with Apple's new PowerBooks. And, sometimes, I get told: 'Oh, you're wrong. No, everything works.' And sometimes I'll get the top manager at Apple: 'Oh, yeah, they work fine.' They work fine if you've got some special set-up program, but not what Apple ships. "A whole bunch of other people find the same problem, eventually. So it's real, but I get told it's not. ..." — Steve Wozniak |
OK, this started off as a (potentially interesting) thread on having write-accessible FTP volumes. I see it has morphed from there, and now borders on becoming an OS X rant. OS X rants are fine; they should be in their own thread, however, so as to not pollute this one.
A few notes to make the continued discussion here useful and not a flamefest (against OS X, moderators, contributors, or anyone else): 1) There is no evidence that Apple has intentionally disabled FTP write access in the Finder to see iDisk subscriptions. There are enough free and nearly-free solutions out there that do work in the Finder that this assumption is borderline ludicrous. If Apple really wanted to do this, they would block all mounting of other writable servers in the Finder (SMB, WebDAV) other than the iDisk; they don't do this, you can use any SMB or WebDAV server you wish. You just can't mount an FTP server as a writeable server. 2) If Apple really was pushing iDisk by limiting the Finder's FTP services, don't you think they'd at least mention iDisk in their technote on that very subject??? Yes, I would too ... but they don't! Not nary a mention of iDisk as an alternative. 3) Getting the Finder itself to mount an FTP volume will be nigh impossible, unless someone can find a way to write a very hacky low-level Finder extension that traps all commands targeted at the FTP server -- and I'm not even sure that's possible. Since the Finder is closed source, it won't be possible to modify its code to pull this off. 4) Given (3), the best solution available at this time if you need FTP write support is a third-party application, a number of which have been mentioned. 5) The really, truly, best solution is to enable WebDAV on the remote server, and then just use the Finder to connect to the WebDAV share, as you'll have full write access. Or use SMB, which also allows for write-mounted volumes in the Finder. Both of those methods provide the full integration you desire, without any third-party apps. In short, the Finder doesn't presently support writable FTP volumes, and only Apple can really change that. For now, use WebDAV, SMB, or a third-party program. And everyone, please try to keep things civil. Remember we're all OS X users here; we're all on the same side of the big debate! :) -rob. |
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To get it back on track, as griffman suggested:
kludges like ftpfs, LUFS, ... are just that, kludges. However, it would be nice if the Finder just talked to any fs Darwin can mount. I suppose the thread-starter has good reason to want to use ftp. Until there is a working solution, the easiest way around it could be an editor such as BBEdit with integrated (s)ftp-capability. But you as an author probably have even stronger feelings about your editor than about file-transfer protocols :) . The already mentioned option to sync a folder every now and then should also solve the problem at hand. You might as well wish to look into offers from freemailers (gmx.net comes to my mind, but there are lots of others) who will give you WebDAV access (1 GB for gmx) you can readily mount and enjoy... Then again, WebDAV via Finder is dog-slow, chances are, that code in the Finder is ugly and inefficient and I wouldn't hold my breath that this is going to change anytime soon now. So if, in spite of your admitted laziness, you are really looking for a solution that will work here and now and you are root on that server of yours, your best bet would be to set up a vpn tunnel to that machine and then run AppleShare over it. netatalk has improved a lot with version 2, it would give you the warm, fuzzy user experience you long for. |
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Done. Ok so it's not strictly speaking FTP in the Finder, but it's still an FTP site in the Finder... (oh, but you'll need to buy a linux/unix machine or a nice friend with one) :P |
That's an extremely nifty and up-to-spec idea.
You might even want to install netatalk on the Unix-machine and mount the ftp-server as a standard AppleShare Volume ! |
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why does the ftp server allow me to write to the directory from a windows machine?
i know i am late on this, but it makes no sense. i am going to get fetch, but i thought it might be odd to some that if you put ftp://username@ftp.dns.com/ in IE on a XP PC, it connects without problem. You might have to specify for it to open it in a new window, or to open it from my net places, but it works. i am a mac guy, but i hae to use pcs for web stuff and i noticed this annoying thing a while back. weird, huh? jhaack1@hotmail.com:o |
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Windows is known for many high-security features such as this. ;) |
It's pretty apparent why Finder-mounted FTP won't happen
After reading the man page for mount_ftp and mount_dav, I realized WHY Apple won't implement write access to FTP for the Finder.
It hit me when I read the part in the WebDAV mounter about Apple only supporting read/write with DAV servers that support DAV LOCK. AHA! I've been wanting to do transfers... edit locally, transfer to remote. However, the Finder would enable all sorts of things, like (foolish perhaps, but possible) the opening of an iMovie project from an FTP server. Without the ability to lock a remote file, it's open for read/write conflicts in a Very Big Way(tm). The only way to avoid the problem is to do something like lock files, which are notoriously for getting out of sync and locking files that shouldn't be locked... among other things. It's a scary thought. :) I'd rather use Transmit (which is Good Software(tm)) with its sync capabilities and a Folder Action to create a drop folder for drag-n-drop uploading. That's all I really want anyway. Laterz! |
Well, it's all a moot point now: With these, Finder FTP mounts now can be read-write; and SSH volume mounts are possible, too!
http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/ http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/users.../MacFusionWeb/ I've got it running, and it's sweet! Flawless! It even has some multithreading built in that avoids the spinning beachball of death in the Finder while it's busy doing its networking thing, unlike TheWormyFruit's™ pathetic read-only Finder FTP mount, which often locks one out for minutes at a time. Once again, some open source teenagers have put to shame the shittiest app in the Mac universe: Apple's own Finder! |
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