Synchronise
and collaborate.
Collect
and edit data.
QFieldCloud allows to synchronize and merge the data collected by your team in QField. From small individual projects to large data collection campaigns, QFieldCloud removes the pain from synchronizing and merging data.
Sync projects and data in real time and work with GeoPackages, KML, GPX, georeferenced PDFs, and more. windows shortcut arrow editor 1.0.0.2 download
Create rich survey forms with constraints, logic, defaults, and validations — all in QGIS. For many Windows users, the desktop is the
Working in the wild ? You can continue to work seamlessly with QFieldCloud, and sync back your changes once you're back in town. For many Windows users
QFieldCloud perfectly integrates and extends your QGIS based geodata infrastructure.
Subscribe for a worry-free Swiss-made solution hosted on Swiss datacenters or contact us for your private cloud instance.
QFieldCloud code is open source so you can see what is actually happening to your data.
Let QFieldCoud manage it. Accurately, efficiently, and anywhere it matters. Get started now
For many Windows users, the desktop is the command center of their digital lives. We spend hours organizing files, choosing the perfect wallpaper, and customizing themes to make the operating system feel like home. Yet, there is one visual element that often goes unnoticed until it becomes an annoyance: the shortcut arrow.
Every time you create a shortcut to a folder, application, or website, Windows overlays a small, white arrow on the bottom left corner of the icon. While this serves a functional purpose—distinguishing the shortcut from the original file—it can be visually disruptive, breaking the aesthetic harmony of a carefully curated desktop.
For many Windows users, the desktop is the command center of their digital lives. We spend hours organizing files, choosing the perfect wallpaper, and customizing themes to make the operating system feel like home. Yet, there is one visual element that often goes unnoticed until it becomes an annoyance: the shortcut arrow.
Every time you create a shortcut to a folder, application, or website, Windows overlays a small, white arrow on the bottom left corner of the icon. While this serves a functional purpose—distinguishing the shortcut from the original file—it can be visually disruptive, breaking the aesthetic harmony of a carefully curated desktop.