![]() So we are generally out of luck.Amazon recently introduced Cloud Drive, an online file storage service where everyone gets 5 GB of free storage space to store all kinds of files in the cloud. The problem is that it doesn't display any files and you will have trouble with the drag & drop upload functionality. I also couldn't test the image-rendering capabilities (you need xterm for that). Install w3m or any alternative (lynx, links2, etc.) and try it out - I didn't get very far, but I haven't tested all of them and you can at least log into the website from your terminal-based browser. There is another idea I thought about: Terminal-based web browsing. ![]() If all this doesn't make you happy right now: I imagine you could use wine to run it (or any of the former tools) to see if you can make those work. There is also some software that lifehacker mentions to be used under Windows. You could of course try to run either of those through wine. The (discontinued) DragonDisk already has linux command-line binaries and supports:Īmazon S3®, Google Cloud Storage®, and all cloud storage services that provides compatibility with Amazon S3 API There are a number of similar products such as Netdrive (only supports Windows). That doesn't help much, though, since they also don't have a Linux version of their (commercial) app, yet, but they are also working on that apparently (originally to be released mid-summer 2015). One app called ExpanDrive also supports Amazon Cloud Drive by now due to user requests. The only hope is an open REST-based API that allows interaction with Amazon Cloud Drive, which is good news, as it essentially means, anybody could build a client for it. ![]() Even the Amazon build app for Mac OS X, which actually is a stand-alone uploader, does not provide a command-line-interface and you can not upload files from the console. These are mostly "cloud-to-cloud-sync" services and absolutely not what you are looking for, though. ![]() There was a list of authorised apps here: but it now only shows official Amazon clients for MacOS and Windows. At the time of asking the answer was unfortunately No, but no more! You can now easily access Amazon Cloud Drive from the terminal using an OpenSource client called acd_cli, which is written in Python (3) and runs under Windows / Linux / Mac. ![]()
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