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When I download an attachment in Asana 1.10.1 for Mac, it opens a new browser tab before downloading. This should just download the file directly into my Downloads folder without browser intervention.

upvote to fix this, I have to be logged into 2 different Asanas, one browser and one app for 2 clients and when I have to download from the app, I have to logout and login to the browser Asana, super annoying

We have exactly the same problem. Since 2 weeks the downlaod via link/browser is extremely reduced. A 600 MB file takes 7 hours (we have a 50 MBs down line; the download use of DROPBOX is 1,4%). We have DROPBOX BUSINESS. There seems to be no interest on side of DB to solve the problem. We'll take next steps.

Same issue, we're using just the browser, and files are so freakin slow, we're talking an hour to download a 17meg file. I notice it slowing after making a few downloads, then it comes to a screaching halt, like they're throttling down the useage or something. It's super frustrating and makes the service completely useless. I'll switch to something else. I had a "tech support" issue going back and forth and after convincing him it wasn't my browser, cache, download speed, first born, whatever, they left it at 'try the app' so I quite the discussion.

Alot of stuff can be the cause of it. The browser, where you are downloading from, the servers from where you are downloading may not be as fast as others, there are things like clearing the cache of the browser and clearing temp files can also help speed up things.

My question is, is there any way to specify the name of a file to be downloaded using just HTML? So a user uploads a file named 'abc.txt' and I rename it to 'xyz.txt', but when they download it I want the browser to save the file as 'abc.txt' by default. If this isn't possible with just HTML, is there any way to do it?

I've had some issues with the suggested solution that creates an a DOM element, and sets the download attribute. It still displayed a popup warning in some browsers (perhaps they got a little stricter by 2021).

In 2021 you can download a PDF file without browser warnings, without PHP or Apache settings, using an XMLHttpRequest as suggested by Edhowler. His code example uses an npm library though. Here's how to do it using js only:

The first reason I preferred Nick's approach is because it allowed me to set it on a per folder basis so PDF's in one folder could still be opened in the browser while allowing others (the ones we would like users to edit and then re-upload) to be forced as downloads.

The behaviour should depend on how the browser is set up to handle various MIME types. In this case the MIME type is application/pdf. If you want to force the browser to download the file you can try forcing a different MIME type on the PDF files. I recommend against this as it should be the users choice what will happen when they open a PDF file.

Dropbox can't offer that functionality. Your browser controls it. The download process is a function of your browser, not Dropbox. Dropbox just sends the data to your browser. It's your browser that handles it, including the save location. Just change the setting in your browser and your problem is solved. No changes to Dropbox required (or possible).

I'm missing this too, and course Dropbox CAN offer this functionality. There are plenty of other websites which promt the browser to open a "Save as" window rather than just downloading to the default download folder

There definitely seems to be some sort of problem going on over the past few days with file transfers through the browser. For several days, I haven't been able to upload any file larger than 1MB to my online folders, either through the advanced uploader or the basic uploader. I very much doubt that it's an issue with my computer -- I have exactly the same internet speed now that I had in the past when Dropbox last performed as it should, I haven't noticed similar problems with other websites (since I'm able to download files from other sites), and I've performed a thorough tune-up on my computer (updated the operating system, updated the anti-virus software, scanned the computer for malware, cleared out the junk files, removed obsolete entries from the registry, defragmented the hard drive, etc.). I've submitted a help desk ticket to Dropbox but haven't heard back from anyone yet.

If anything, the first response gave me the impression that the technical support person actually hadn't paid much attention to what I originally wrote since one of the questions he asked me was "which files aren't syncing" even though my help desk ticket clearly stated that this was not a problem which involved their proprietary software application but rather one encountered using drag-and-drop to upload files through the browser. (I tried using the application at one point but syncing files automatically is not a priority for me and I don't particularly want to keep most of these files resident on my system...that's what I have Dropbox *for*, to serve as a place to store files so that they're not taking up space on my hard drive.)

The follow-up response (which I received three days later in response to the answers I gave to his questions) was also disappointing since it implied that the problem could not possibly be related to Dropbox and must therefore be Firefox's fault. He suggested that I clear the cache even though I'd already stated quite clearly in response to one of the questions from his first response that I'd subjected my computer to a fairly comprehensive tune-up -- which included emptying the internet cache (as well as updating the operating system and anti-virus software, scanning the computer for viruses, clearing the registry of obsolete entries, defragmenting the hard drive, etc.). He also suggested disabling the plug-ins even though I had the same plug-ins installed on Firefox when Dropbox was still performing the way it was supposed to several weeks ago. One of his final suggestions was basically "well, use some browser other than Firefox to upload files or else use our software application".

First of all, if his website is incompatible with a major (and popular) web browser like Firefox, most people would understandably interpret this as a problem which Dropbox ought to be taking steps to address rather than expecting other people to simply work around it. Secondly, not everyone wants to use their application or would even benefit from doing so since a major feature of the application is that it (supposedly!) keeps files in the cloud automatically synced with files on the computer...but not everyone cares about that. Some of us just want a place where we can store files that we don't use much or at all right now but might need or want later, files which we don't want taking up space on our hard drive.

The /gbdb fileserver offers access to all files referenced by the Genome Browser tables, with serversin North America andEurope for faster downloads.Many files in the browser, such as bigBed files, are hosted in binary format. For example, in the hg38 database, thecrispr.bb and crisprDetails.tab files for the CRISPR trackcan be found using the following URLs:  North American server:   European server: -euro.soe.ucsc.edu/gbdb/hg38/crispr/ Individual regions or whole genome annotations from binary files can be obtained using toolssuch as bigBedToBed, which can be downloaded as a precompiled binary for your system (see the Source and utilities downloads section). The bigBedToBed tool can also be used to obtain aspecific subset of features within a given range, e.g.:

Using the Adobe Acrobat Reader mobile app, you can do the same tasks on your iOS or Android devices too. To download the Adobe Acrobat Reader mobile app, visit Google Play or the iTunes App Store. You can also fill and sign forms using your web browser.

Existing customers of Acrobat Sign can use Acrobat Sign mobile app to do the same on Android or iOS. To download the app for free, visit Google Play or the iTunes App Store. You can also send files for signature using your web browser.

If you're using Chromium-based Microsoft Edge, this one's for you. LastPass browser extension for Microsoft Edge without a binary component. Features dependent on a binary component, such as automatic logoff after idle and sharing of login state with other browsers, will not function.

LastPass browser extension for Opera without a binary component. Features dependent on a binary component, such as automatic logoff after idle and sharing of login state with other browsers, will not function. 0852c4b9a8

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