brauchichdas@gmx.d wrote on Jun 24
th, 2014 at 1:05pm:
I want to sync only selected soft folders between two Firefox profiles. Firefox Sync is in use at both of them but with different accounts (all bookmarks, work only).
I understand. Yes, you want Export Exclusions to be more granular, per-Client instead of per-browser. [/quote]
brauchichdas@gmx.d wrote on Jun 24
th, 2014 at 1:05pm:
My idea now was to sync the selected folders to another browser like iCab employing Export Exclusions. Using a second Bookmarkshelf document i sync iCab and Firefox's Work account. Would that work or is this just creating mess?
It would definitely be a Rube Goldberg contraption. First of all, iCab is not a good choice because we can only sync iCab when it quits. Safari, Chrome and Firefox are the only browsers that we can watch for changes, and Safari is the only browser for which we can observe changes while it is not running. See attached drawing. Although I can't think of any reason why it wouldn't work, we're getting into untested territory.
brauchichdas@gmx.d wrote on Jun 24
th, 2014 at 1:05pm:
I thought it would be good to have individual Import settings for each client for defining how to deal with unmatched items.
In Settings > Clients, when you click the
Advanced (gear icon) buttons, there is no
Delete unmatched items for each Client; only for the aggregate Import. I think you're suggesting that it would be necessary to switch this on when importing from the "work only" client, so that items would not be deleted. That should not be necessary, if I recall correctly, because BookMacster checks to see if an unmatched item would have been excluded from an export to the client being imported from, and if so, will not delete it during an import.
Another idea would be to trigger syncs on schedules (using
Advanced Agents or AppleScript/Automator) instead of
bookmarks changed. Then that guy in the middle could be a "loose" file instead of Safari or Chrome. Schedule one, then a couple minutes later, the other. It would be a different Rube Goldberg.
I'll let you know if I think of something better.