We’re pleased to announce the release of the Jungle Disk 1.50a, which includes the new Jungle Disk Plus features. You can read more about Jungle Disk Plus on our web site and in our announcement blog post.
The new features and changes in this version include:
- Support for upload resume (Jungle Disk Plus)
- Support for block-level file updates (Jungle Disk Plus)
- Native filesystem integration on Linux using FUSE
- Jungle Disk Monitor window positions and sizes saved between starts
- Fixed Windows taskbar menu popup overwriting
- Fixed repetitive SmartCrashReport prompts on Mac
- Mac users can now decline to show network volumes on desktop
- Computer only woken from sleep for daily or weekly backups
- Exclude missing drives during backup cleanup
- Fixed large fonts support on Vista
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Phil said,
January 9, 2008 @ 10:00 pm
Thanks for the update! I use this frequently on my (Mac) laptop and have issues sleeping the computer and waking on a different wireless network or interface (wireless -> ethernet). When I wake I get the network volume disconnected, though everything works fine if I reconnect the volume. Can you implement a “reconnect mounted volume on wake” option to correct this?
Cheers
Todd Courtnage said,
January 11, 2008 @ 4:29 pm
“Native filesystem integration on Linux using FUSE”
Sweet!!!!!!!!!
Christopher Keller said,
January 11, 2008 @ 10:14 pm
Any chance of an OS X implementation over MacFUSE?
Jungle Dave said,
January 11, 2008 @ 11:09 pm
Native filesystem support for both OSX and Windows will be coming down the road.
Valentin said,
January 12, 2008 @ 7:19 am
Nice improvements – however for me the security implications of web based access are to great (the problem, however, is not trusting you with the key; for me its much more having all data accessible with one password that is easily captured when I use the web interface on some computer whose security I cannot asses) .. why not introduce a special ‘transfer’ folder whose content is unencrypted, accessible from the desktop program and the web (without uploading the encryption keys). Yea, i still could not access all my data, but could make some data easily accessible and upload from everywhere.
Stephen Turner said,
January 12, 2008 @ 7:30 am
I would like to support the suggestion made by Valentine above. While I may need to keep the majority of my data private, I would like the option of making some folders public (photgraphs of the kids) and some accessable with a folder specific key (sharing some files with a friend).
Will said,
January 12, 2008 @ 9:40 pm
I used JungleDisk on and off during its beta period and stopped once it looked like the linux support was waning, but now I’m going to try using it again, thanks for the hard and steady work adding in such great features
Heinrich said,
January 14, 2008 @ 5:19 am
I really love Jungledisk. What could be greatly improved though is the load when using Jungledisk with Windows XP. I don’t know if it is due to my system, but everytime I copy/move a large amount of files to “my Jungledisk”, the system seems completely maxed out, responds slow. When copying files from one folder to another on my HD, I can still use windows. When copying to Jungledisk, this is impossible, the system responds so slowly. Could be due to encryption or something too?