chromeos.dev VS cloudcmd

Compare chromeos.dev vs cloudcmd and see what are their differences.

chromeos.dev

chromeOS.dev is the digital home for all things ChromeOS. Learn how to adapt and optimize your existing apps to work on ChromeOS, the success other companies have had doing so, how to use ChromeOS as your developer machine, and keep up-to-date with the latest on ChromeOS. (by chromeos)

cloudcmd

✨☁️📁✨ Cloud Commander file manager for the web with console and editor. (by coderaiser)
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chromeos.dev cloudcmd
1 10
233 1,771
2.1% -
7.5 9.2
7 days ago 9 days ago
JavaScript JavaScript
Apache License 2.0 MIT License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

chromeos.dev

Posts with mentions or reviews of chromeos.dev. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects.

cloudcmd

Posts with mentions or reviews of cloudcmd. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-06-20.
  • What's your web browser based access to file system?
    6 projects | /r/selfhosted | 20 Jun 2023
    I assume it is this one: https://cloudcmd.io/
  • Cloud Commander
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 29 May 2023
  • Ask HN
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 3 Sep 2022
    Personally, and I can't name a tool for you, I consider that:

    - files&folder taxonomies are limited. Sometimes a file should be in more than one place, there are links/symlinks but no "backlinks" so it's easy top break things and filenames are not much good for search. Essentially a path in a file&folder classic taxonomy is a kind of limited and limited query to reach some content;

    - notes are another interesting things: ALL documents are kind of notes. The fact we have many file formats and apps just to craft document is more a limit and an issue of modern systems that a reasonable thing.

    Given the above two consideration I decide for myself to org-attach almost anything. The complete setup is:

    - org-roam, org-ql (with a semi-curated catalog to make queries and yasnippets to ensure consistency) and ripgrep as access layer, witch practically means hitting a single key on my keyboard and start typing something. In 99% of the case I get "the good answer" (something already done or new content to add), sometimes I need rg/recoll because just heading/tags search do not work and in that case I adjust/add some roam_aliases to easy mach the content in the future. Sometimes I need queries to work on things, like "check all active contracts" or "current issue" or "last three days notes" etc;

    - org-attach and links and dired to craft small "secondary-level file hierarchies" as a storage management layers, something that hide my real home taxonomy (essentially just notes on one root, other files managed by org-attach under another in a cache-like tree) I access via links;

    - various org-mode extras to link different kind of stuff I can't org-attach properly, like mails (individual messages, threads, search queries on my mails etc), transactions (hledger via org-babel), mere elisp:(sexp) code to be executed live on click.

    Doing so allow me to IGNORE a limited and limited hierarchy, allow crafting dynamic hierarchies as results from SQL-alike (albeit limited and slow) queries, accessing most of the content in search&narrow style something proven to be effective in most kind of UI from search engines to "dashes" instead of "menus" etc and allow to blend a bit most kind of docs in a single "document"/page/live environment witch is VERY useful since we have a single mind, not really compartmentalized and we need different kind of "docs" together often.

    This is IMVHO how we should manage files in 2022 BUT since Emacs and classic desktop model for commercial and ignorance reasons is essentially dead it's not something ready out-of-the-box and not something designed for collaboration. It's just a personal HYPER-effective solution that might wrap&hide far less effective one used by collaborators still allowing interaction.

    The modern equivalent, far more limited, complex and heavyweight is a DMS (see Nuxeo, Alfresco, ...) mostly crappy WebUIs that wrap Apache Jackrabbit behind the scene and add some forms/tags/ways to classify documents in various "dynamic" and "less constrained" ways. With a bit of hesitation for a small team https://www.tagspaces.org is less crazy to setup and use. Othe simpler but probably too limited options are https://github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser or https://cloudcmd.io/ or https://filerun.com/ or https://www.seafile.com/ or https://tabbles.net/ some are proprietary and all are not much more than classic file browsers served via webapp on a file-server backend storage instead of a local one.

  • Your top 5 best self hosted apps?
    36 projects | /r/selfhosted | 22 Aug 2022
    Cloud Commander - Web based remote file manager, while there are a handful of them it's the one I keep coming back to.
  • Best way to move files around on OMV5 - from A GUI
    2 projects | /r/OpenMediaVault | 17 May 2022
    Fire up a Docker container of cloudcmd, map your volumes, and go nuts.
  • Cloud Commander – Cloud file manager with console and editor
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 4 May 2022
  • Looking for a simple web based file browser for Ubuntu
    5 projects | /r/selfhosted | 27 Apr 2022
    check out Cloudcommander (like MC but in a browser)
  • Self Hosted Weekly Roundup #2
    2 projects | /r/selfhosted | 14 Apr 2022
    You should have a look at cloudcmd. It's a browser-based file manager with drag&drop which also offers an SSH shell/terminal emulation.
  • Real hidden gems when it comes to self hosting
    68 projects | /r/selfhosted | 17 Mar 2022
    Cloudcmd - browser-based ssh terminal and file manager (read: byobu, screen, and all the other terminal apps like taskbook, now count as being 'self-hosted') - - there are a few browser-based RDP programs like Apache Guacamole Server, but I haven't tried them (yet).
  • Is there a file manager similar to synologys "file station"
    3 projects | /r/OpenMediaVault | 1 Feb 2022
    Cloudcmd?