You guessed right: I indeed use those files on my computer very occasionally and I'd rather make a shortcut / alias (like you rightly suggested) than mounting the share at every boot. True, if you have quality disks (which are getting more difficult to find nowadays) you shouldn't be worried about wear.
On a side note I could do my tag editing just fine, thanks again for your help!
You're absolutely right! I'm not super tech-savvy and I was convinced that those file sharing protocols were more or less equivalent (I only tried to compare in terms of speed). I never payed much attention to it because my other computers were doing fine with one or the other.
Thanks for your help! I did setup my NAS share as NFS capable, and I mapped the users as admin. Using the command mentioned in my other comment I could mount the share successfully and find it in several applications. Cheers!
Hi again!
Your command worked very well. Thank you kindly!
The share is indeed available on the mount path.
Experiences with the audio taggers is very uneven though:
Thank you for your feedback, I'll have to check on the machine later today. So far, I thought that the share had to be mounted once (on Nemo file manager for instance) so I could find it on the applications. If so, I did it already and it's not showing anywhere else on the software I mentioned.
By the way if you have a suggestion of an application that works for you on this kind of setup I'd be glad to try.
Thanks for your help! I have to try this at home later today.
Do I have to do this if my network shares are already mounted on the file manager? For example I use Nemo and my NAS is shown on the left side and I felt like my files were already mounted on the system (there's a "eject icon next to the name of the share).
Thank you for your contribution, I was referring to a practical way (script, binary, ...) to achieve this not academic literature, I don't have much time to invest in this and my IT level is insufficient
If someone has a way to poison their AI training by adding junk along my regular files I'm interested. Sadly I use it at work and I cannot decide to migrate to another cloud so I better sabotage them
Wow that's an very interesting beast! That moment when you realize that the website is the tool itself really is something