

Open this page on the Strava website, click Choose Files and select the FIT file.
Just press record icloud drive download#

Delete a file? You can go pull it out of the trash maybe. In my eyes, it's a very consistent and expected experience.
Just press record icloud drive mac#
And yes, when you click on "delete all" in the web interface you get a very similar warning and the file(s) are removed from the trash can on your local mac as well. Once I empty the trash (or click on "delete all" in the "recently deleted view on the web"), it's in the "gone, not able to be recovered" bit bucket in the sky. Which is precisely what I expect - trash can/"recently deleted" on the website are the "this is gone but I can still get it back". When I empty the trash on my desktop, and it warns me "this stuff is going away and can't be undone" the file(s) in recently deleted are gone as well. No, there is one, and it contains files that I have recently deleted (but not emptied from the trash can on my local desktop). And neither do I want a second, more permanent, "no really, super empty trash" option. There can't be infinitely nested last-chance recovery opportunities, at some point "permanently deleted" has got to mean exactly that. On the other hand, the "recover deleted items" function isn't really doing what it implies, if I can't. If a user has affirmatively and permanently deleted a file, I can see why a sync protocol might immediately replicate that deletion across all devices if I've said I want the data gone, it may well be that the *last* thing I want is for that data to be in any way recoverable. I think one of the big challenges with file sync of any kind is determining the ultimate source of truth. Emptying the trash explicitly warns the user that deletion is permanent, so I guess that fits with Apple's language, but their own link explaining permanent removal of of iCloud Drive items doesn't really clarify that. If you *permanently remove" the file, it will be. When you move a file from your local iCloud Drive to the trash, it will appear under the "recently deleted" tab in for 30 days. And for the record, iCloud Music Library and iCloud Photo Library work the same way as well. If you made a post on Twitter and deleted it on your iPhone you wouldn’t expect to still see it on your Mac right? Because the content lives on Twitter. The best way to think of it is that you are accessing “iCloud based” files from your Mac, or iOS device, or browser. You have to stop thinking of it as you are accessing “local” files on your Mac and there’s a “copy” in iCloud. So if you delete a document and then empty the trash on any device it’s GONE … because there is only that one document which lives in iCloud. So any change you make to a document on one device is reflected on them all because they are all accessing the same document. Most importantly, the way you should think of it is that your documents now live in iCloud and your various devices all have access to them. It’s technically more of a “sync” service but just set all that aside because it only muddies the water. It would appear you have a fundamental misunderstanding of how iCloud Drive works when you enable “Desktop & Documents Folders” on the Mac.
