Originally posted by french frank
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There is no problem if the pdf papers are downloaded first to the desktop machine, as they can then be synced with ipads - and they were even in the early days. The problem was is the pdfs were first downloaded onto the iPads - which students operating in mobile mode might want to do.
Getting the files back from a tablet to a desktop or tablet may have presented problems.
With a PC and a USB stick this is easy - just stick them all in a folder, copy the folder to USB, plug the stick into target PC (even a Mac) and copy the folder. With an iPad, which doesn't have USB capability, this is not possible. Thus the great advantage of being able to read and download research articles while mobile is somewhat annulled by the difficulty of doing the transfer back to other machines.
Although I personally I have an aversion to iCloud, that would do the job, but synchronising between iPads and MacOS X via iCloud has only become a sensible option in the last couple of years with the recent versions of MacOS X and iOS. I think it will work with pdfs stored in Papers now - but then it was a pain.
Also, the somewhat earlier iOS update(s) which wiped out user's files, unless they happened to be backed up in an Apple approved app, were not helpful either. As I wrote earlier, associating files with apps in the iOS way is a bonkers way to do a file system - but that's what Apple has done. This is presumably done so that users don't get confused with terminology such as "file", "file name", "hierarchical file store", "directory structure" etc. . Files get backed up with apps. At that time recovery, if possible at all, involved reinstalling the earlier iOS version, checking to see if the files were still available, trying to recover them, and then finally redoing the update. The "upgrades" could take hours, so it was not trivial! Ouch!
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