Jungle Disk 1.50c Released
A minor update for Jungle Disk is now available for download. Jungle Disk 1.50c was released primarily to fix a timeout issue when resuming uploads for files over 1GB in size with Jungle Disk Plus, however a few other minor features / fixes were included as well. See the release notes for a full list of changes.
This will hopefully be the last minor update for the 1.50 release, and we’ll be starting on features for the next major release shortly. Stay tuned to the blog for more info on what’s coming next.



Mikael said,
January 30, 2008 @ 4:06 pm
I really need to be able to run jungledisk as a native service.
Gregory said,
January 31, 2008 @ 5:07 am
Guys, I think you’re doing great job. I am very satisfied with your backup service quality and robustness!
mark said,
February 8, 2008 @ 3:39 am
I’ve been using Jungledisk since the very early days when it was announced on the s3 forum. it has gone from being a small part of my backup solution to the primary backup AND has helped me through one catastrophic disk failure and two other machine moves without any loss of data. So just wanted to say: Fantastic job! This is a great bit of software.
Sander said,
February 8, 2008 @ 8:40 am
When browsing through the mapped drive, sometimes windows explorer becomes unresponsive, and opening jungledisk shows that it’s copying larger files that take a while — I presume for the local cache?
Is there anything I can do to remedy this as it really dictates that I use a local jungledisk copy and then sync changes over to the mapped drive when I’m done to avoid this. And using JD like that would be disappointing.
Jungle Dave said,
February 8, 2008 @ 9:49 am
@Sander - Windows Explorer downloads some types of files automatically when browsing in order to get icons or other metadata - e.g. EXEs, images, in some cases mp3. You can reduce this by browsing in “details”, however the only way to completely avoid it is by using the My Jungle Disk web folder rather than the mapped drive. Note that the files will only be downloaded once, and after that kept in cache.