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Create Synchronicity

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Create Synchronicity
Create-synchronicity-logo-128x128
Developer(s)Create Software (Clément Pit--Claudel)
Stable release
6.0 March 11, 2012; 14 years ago (2012-03-11)
Engine
    Operating systemWindows 2000, XP, Vista, Seven
    TypeUtility
    LicenseGPL v3.0
    Website http://synchronicity.sourceforge.net

    Search Create Synchronicity on Amazon.

    Create Synchronicity is a portable, multilingual[1] file synchronization and backup tool developed in VB.Net, and released under the GNU General Public License, version 3.0.

    Development

    Create Synchronicity was created with the aim of delivering a lightweight[2] backup application for Windows systems. Its development started in June 2009,[3] and has been active since then.[4] An experimental port to Linux was published in February 2011.[5]

    Features

    Create Synchronicity has both a graphical and a command line interface.

    The following features are available:

    • Customizable backup,[6] using distinct backup profiles.
    • Full synchronization preview
    • Scheduling, with catching up support.
    • Inclusion and exclusion of files and folders using regular expressions
    • DST correction, loose timing (allows file times between source and destination to differ by a few seconds)
    • Precise folder selection
    • Native support for UNC and relative paths, as well as implicit paths (such as "MyUsb"\MyFolder)
    • Support for environment variables, dynamic destination naming
    • Support for Network (NAS) Backup

    Create Synchronicity can be downloaded as a zip file or as an installer for Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7. It is hosted by Sourceforge, and ranked #32 on December 23, 2010.[7]

    Performance

    Create Synchronicity uses its own comparison algorithm to speed up the preview step, which reduces disk accesses,[8] and has been said to be "Easy to use, lightweight and fast.".[9]

    However, since it uses the .Net Framework, Create Synchronicity may be slower to launch than native applications[10][11] (written for example in C/C++), but similar to applications written in Java.[12] Provided that disk accesses are the slowest part of the scan and backup process, the impact of choosing VB.Net on performance should be minimal[citation needed].

    Being written in VB.Net, Create Synchronicity does take advantage of the file caching functions of the underlying operating system,[13] which can speed the preview step.[14] However, this performance gain doesn't exist if synchronizing two external hard drives, and/or if the caching process has not run yet.

    Create Synchronicity has been translated to English, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Dutch, Czech, Indonesian, Hebrew, Danish, Russian, Estonian, Polish, Bulgarian, Korean, Chinese (Simplified), Hungarian, Chinese (Traditional), Amharic, Greek, Turkish, Japanese, and Slovene.

    See also

    References

    1. Currently available in English, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Dutch, Czech, Indonesian, Hebrew, Danish, Russian, Estonian, Polish, Bulgarian, Korean, Chinese (Simplified), Hungarian, Chinese (Traditional), Amharic, Greek, Turkish, Japanese, and Slovene; see the official website
    2. Quick review on Carol's Vault - The zipped package weighs approximately 210kB as of March 2012.
    3. Release Notes on Create Synchronicity SVN server
    4. Code analysis on Ohloh
    5. Create Synchronicity latest builds. The port relies on Mono, an open source implementation of the Common Language Runtime.
    6. Demo video on DownloadTube
    7. [1]
    8. Syncing code on Create Synchronicity SVN server
    9. An article by Johnny Karp, editor of the Freeware Mission website, about Create Synchronicity
    10. Application Startup Time entry on MSDN
    11. Improving startup time on MSDN's CLR Inside Out
    12. A full Java/VB.Net comparison
    13. File Caching explained on MSDN
    14. The editor of Software Critics wrote about Create Synchronicity that "Aside from being highly customizable, it’s light-weight having 80kB file size when zipped and 170kB when extracted saving so much disk space to spare. Behind its tiny size, the application is big in performance."

    External links


    This article "Create Synchronicity" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.