I guess it depends on your workload. My Nextcloud was only for myself and my family, and we only used it for "files on the go".
Calendar/contacts is handled by iCloud (Apple household, it's a Danish thing...)
Notes are handled by whatever each person finds the easiest. My wife defaults to the iOS notes app, i switch between various clear text editors.
File synchronization on desktops/laptops is handled by Synology Drive, which syncs beautifully whenever the machine is connected to our LAN, either directly or through VPN.
The only problem i needed to solve was ad-hoc access to files on mobile devices, preferably without opening ports, and since VPN doesn't always work from other private networks (ip scope clash usually), i chose not to use Synology tools for this. Besides, Synology Drive doesn't support selective sync, and while documents probably wouldn't be a problem, synchronizing gigabytes of books to my phone isn't really an option :)
Resilio on Linux does have a nasty habit of doing disk IO all the time, a habit that syncthing doesn't have. When i look at running processes, Resilio on linux is constantly using 2-5% CPU.
Calendar/contacts is handled by iCloud (Apple household, it's a Danish thing...)
Notes are handled by whatever each person finds the easiest. My wife defaults to the iOS notes app, i switch between various clear text editors.
File synchronization on desktops/laptops is handled by Synology Drive, which syncs beautifully whenever the machine is connected to our LAN, either directly or through VPN.
The only problem i needed to solve was ad-hoc access to files on mobile devices, preferably without opening ports, and since VPN doesn't always work from other private networks (ip scope clash usually), i chose not to use Synology tools for this. Besides, Synology Drive doesn't support selective sync, and while documents probably wouldn't be a problem, synchronizing gigabytes of books to my phone isn't really an option :)
Resilio on Linux does have a nasty habit of doing disk IO all the time, a habit that syncthing doesn't have. When i look at running processes, Resilio on linux is constantly using 2-5% CPU.