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Sorry if my question is vague, it sort of required the reader to know what happens in regular ubuntu.
With ubuntu, you go to the web site sign up for "ubuntu one" then the next time you boot your PC there is a new folder in home called ubuntu one and you can use it. I have no idea how the magic works but it does.
I would like a magic folder in home called ubuntu one that syncs automatically.
I have one for dropbox that syncs between this PC and my windows 7 netbook. I thought that if Canonical was going to give me another 2Gb I would grab it.
you simply have to install the package ubuntuone-client-gnome using kpackagekit and it will run in kubuntu just fine, though there is no file-manager integration as it has in Ubuntu. the ubuntu-one applet does create the "Ubuntu One" directory, and anything placed in there is synced between all your other (Ubuntu/Kubuntu) machines running ubuntu one
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