Seascape for Notes is an archiving solution for Lotus Notes (HCL Notes and Domino). It enables administrators to archive entire Notes applications, mail files, and other custom databases using a streamlined archiving process.
At the core of the product is SWING Software’s proprietary PDF rendering engine, which converts Lotus Notes forms and emails into PDF files. The PDF rendering engine was built specifically to convert Notes-specific types of content, such as embedded views, tabbed content, rich-text content, computed fields, document links, and more. It provides the highest PDF conversion fidelity for Lotus Notes available on the market today.
As part of the database archiving process, Seascape for Notes converts all database documents into PDF files, and it also extracts the file attachments from Notes documents and document metadata (saved as XML or JSON files). Administrators can choose between deploying the exported database content via standalone Web Archives or in Microsoft SharePoint lists or libraries. The PDF files in the SharePoint library remain linked to each other in the same way as the original Lotus Notes documents were linked using the Notes doclinks feature.
Seascape also provides the ability to generate PDF and XML archives with automatically generated folder structures and rule-based filenames. This type of archive is suitable for manual or scripted import into any other content repository, either on-premise or in the cloud.
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Based on our record, MultCloud seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 7 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I just used multcloud.com to transfer all of my photos to Dropbox. Im pretty sure it retained all of the original photo data and was way easier than that takeout bullshit. Source: almost 2 years ago
Better use Rclone for this. I don't have very much experience using rsync, but I know Rclone would do this job very fine. If you don't want to get a VPS or run Rclone locally, you could consider a service like multcloud.com to migrate from Google Drive to Dropbox. Source: almost 2 years ago
I did some Googling, and found there's a service called MultCloud. Source: about 2 years ago
I might have found a workaround if no one else has any other idea. This site (multcloud.com) is for transferring between clouds. Source: about 3 years ago
I have tried multcloud.com, cloudsfer.com end some minor ones. None of these are accurate IMHO. They are not able to move all contents leaving me with an issue to check hundreds of items. Also they do not provide a simple feature: move ALL from A to B, period. I do have loose photos and many Albums I would like to preserve. Sadly, Google Drive desktop client is not able to create Albums based on directories. Source: over 3 years ago
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