It’s cross platform and you don’t have to be near the other device if I understand it correctly
Comment on Have any of you used Tailscale's AirDrop alternative Taildrop?
dpkonofa@lemmy.world 1 year ago
What benefit does this have over AirDrop? This seems like a more limited version of AirDrop with way more steps in-between. I’m asking this as well as someone who has a Synology NAS.
nix@merv.news 1 year ago
lemmyvore@feddit.nl 1 year ago
Not sure why the poster compared to AirDrop because it’s not really similar.
AirDrop works over WiFi and can send to nearby devices (using their radios to connect directly, even in the absence of a WiFi network). It can be used with strangers’ devices if they have theirs set to public mode — which has led to some unpleasant incidents as you can imagine.
Tailscale is primarily a private VPN network that you create only between your personal trusted devices, not strangers’. It works over the internet so it requires a working connection (of any kind). Its primary function is secure communication between your devices, for example you can do things like connect to services on your home server, assist a relative over remote desktop, use your home PC’s connection when you’re on hotel WiFi etc.
Tailscale is usually not something you keep going all the time but you can if you want, there’s no penalty for doing it. It only uses the encrypted tunnel when you connect to another of your Tailscale-enabled devices.
I guess you could stay connected to your Tailscale all the time just so you can drop stuff between your phone and PC for example. It’s not hard to use, you just get their app, enroll it, and then it’s just an on/off switch.
dpkonofa@lemmy.world 1 year ago
But this isn’t just Tailscale. It’s Tailscale and Taildrop. What’s the Taildrop piece?
lemmyvore@feddit.nl 1 year ago
Taildrop is just an extra feature tacked on top of Tailscale, it’s not a separate product. Normally each Tailscale node only does VPN tunneling, routing, and a bit of DNS. “Taildrop” is marketing speak for “now you can also transfers files between nodes”.
They also have a feature where Tailscale acts as a SSH server if you don’t already have one on that node. It’s called… get ready… Tailscale SSH. I mean, you’d think they’d go with Tailshell or something cool, right?
But seriously, if it were easy they’d probably also add some sort of remote desktop, that would be really cool.