>Every flow and part of their website is about converting people to paid
Their client is no better, constantly sending out desktop notifications that my dropbox is getting full and I should upgrade to their 1TB plan immediately.
Beware that I deployed it in an enterprise environment (after a successful pilot and having used it successfully on my, small, network for months) and it often failed when tasked with rapidly changing files from multiple different clients. This was on a 30-client/3 buildings on a point-to-point VPN setup.
The customer lost data on regular basis and I had to back out from the solution. This was when it still was btsync, and may be it meanwhile has improved, but just test it with a significant number of client and concurrent edits before trying a (relatively) big deploy.
The initial setup was confusing, though I appreciate it's offering configuration that's not possible with a service like Dropbox.
Almost all the time, files are synced to the other device when I want to see them. Occasionally, if that's just a few seconds after the file was created (e.g. take photo on phone and expect to see it on the computer) some connection glitch delays this. I can't rely on the interface to tell when this has happened.
I'm a little sad that there's no low price offering comparable to Google drives 2$/100GB. I just don't need a TB of personal space but I like the dropbox client a lot better. Especially because of linux support and for some reason syncing seems to be significantly faster.
Dropbox uses full differential syncing, the only mainstream client that does that universally. Onedrive only differential syncs with office files. Google drive, well, uses full file syncing for every file.
Could you please elaborate on what differential syncing means? Does Dropbox break down each file into small chunks before uploading? What are the advantages?
Exactly same feeling. I’d like to know what is the argument against this pricing model because I’m pretty sure they have considered or reviewed different pricing models.
Exactly. We've been waiting for years for a real Dropbox client for smartphones, and now this.
I think you can you can activate sync for individual files. But as you have to activate this for each file individually, this it somewhat defeats the point. There are more options in the pro version, but why then count it towards the limit for free users.
I hardly even use dropbox on mobile anyway, it just happens to be one of the most convenient ways to transfer pdfs to my iPad.
I don't understand the Dropbox negativity on HN. I've used it since 2010 and it has provided me with incredible value. I used to have free service for documents but my library of data grew larger. I signed up for their $10/month program without a hitch and have been a paying user for years. You get a terabyte of space.
I got rid of NAS backups and I have selective sync enabled on folders that I need synced. Large files remain in the cloud.
There are a few things that I think are worth paying for. Dropbox delivers every day, every hour with no worries of backups.
In terms of limiting devices, remember when iTunes introduced 5 authorized devices? Spotify Free has ads all over. Dropbox's business model is to convert free paying users by exemplifying the value that they provide without excessive nags, ads or annoyances.
HN has always had a problem with Dropbox. Check out the very first post announcing Dropbox for evidence of the negativity that the product received: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8863
It is disappointing to see how users these days have gotten used to the "Free" model and feel entitled for a free service on the internet.
I recall when GMail launched with 1 GB free data. That was HUGE and everyone switched from Hotmail and Yahoo mail to GMail. Little did an average user know and still doesn't know that Google is an advertisement company. You are the product.
Users have no right to complain about lack of features in a free service which doesn't serve ads, doesn't sell your data or have any other business model other than upsell you their product. I'll be the first one to quit using Dropbox if they get into advertisement business.
"It is disappointing to see how users these days have gotten used to the "Free" model and feel entitled for a free service on the internet."
A price of $0 is just that - a price the company chose. The company could have chosen $10 or $100, but they didn't, because they thought $0 would help to maximize their profit.
There is nothing at all special about a price of $0. It's not a gift. It's an alternative to running Super Bowl commercials.
• Dropbox has failed to improve their offering and even for a paying customer you do not get anything more for your money today than you were getting several years ago. That is not objectively a bad thing, I mean a spoon has hardly evolved in hundred of years and is still worth every penny. But this is HN and that's a bit of a sin around here.
• In search of profitability Dropbox has used several dark marketting patterns. Its website also pushes way too much business/team option that are per user/per month. A lof of people on HN are private user and they basically have access to a single option.
• The new features that Dropbox did introduce work only for corporate/team user. There is now a Professional user but it costs a standard business plan for 2 users with less feature.
• There was some complain about the Mac OS client uses of apis.
Despite the negativity, HN users seems major paying users. So I think rather than negativity it is more disappointment. The feeling that Dropbox could have been so much more and they would have paid for it gladly, but it is instead becoming a network feature for large companies and startup.
I think you could say the same thing about GMail. It looks and works the same way as it did 15 years ago. At times, less is more and feature creep ends up being like Microsoft Outlook - bloated, slow and frustrating to use.
I don't love my set of spoons like I love Dropbox, Digital Ocean, Eames Lounge Chair, Sublime Text/Merge and Teenage Engineering synthesizers. There are a handful of companies that give you immense pleasure in using their products daily.
I was a Dropbox subscriber for years. Paying double compared to other providers to get bombarded with upsell and not have basic features like full text search.
I have slightly less data than the free limit and I'm getting a popup urging me to switch to the paid version almost constantly. I don't even bother to close it anymore, so it just sits there in the corner blocking a part of my screen.
I've been using free Dropbox for a long time. After hitting my storage limits about year ago, I started learning about alternatives for the paid plans. Ended up with self hosted Nextcloud ( https://nextcloud.com/ ), which is open source. Been super happy with Nextcloud, would definitely recommend it for anyone who isn't fully happy with Dropbox.
The clients for macOS and iOS are not as polished as Dropbox and many apps use Dropbox integrations, but I've managed to find workarounds for everything except 1Password, which is why I'm currently looking for alternative (preferrably open source) solutions for it.
> I've managed to find workarounds for everything except 1Password
I haven't personally used it, but I've seen Bitwarden being highly recommended here. It's free and open source. It has a free option (with an account on bitwarden.com), a paid hosting option (with an account on bitwarden.com) and also a self-hosting option.
It seems, time to use Amazon Drive: $12 for 100Gb annual. I was dropbox paying customers for years but stopped my subscription in 2016 in favor of Google Photos and iCloud. I realized there's nothing to store there other than a general photos/videos, all my docs takes less than a few gigabytes of data. Also I was changed for nothing, like restore file deleted a minute ago.
> If you're a Basic user and you linked more than three devices prior to March 2019, all of your previously linked devices will remain linked, but you can’t link additional devices.
For how long will the previously linked devices remain linked...in other words, when will Dropbox force basic plan users to reduce the count to three? I foresee that happening in the future.
And what does this mean for people who change devices (like get a new phone to replace the old one)? Do they have to use the same device name or can they unlink the older device and link the new device in its place? This page does not talk about this scenario.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 106 ms ] threadIt's been ages since I visited dropbox but my god how things have changed. Every flow and part of their website is about converting people to paid.
Their client is no better, constantly sending out desktop notifications that my dropbox is getting full and I should upgrade to their 1TB plan immediately.
The initial setup was confusing, though I appreciate it's offering configuration that's not possible with a service like Dropbox.
Almost all the time, files are synced to the other device when I want to see them. Occasionally, if that's just a few seconds after the file was created (e.g. take photo on phone and expect to see it on the computer) some connection glitch delays this. I can't rely on the interface to tell when this has happened.
(I have ~6GB of mostly music + photos synced.)
This should save some bandwidth at the expense of CPU time.
I think you can you can activate sync for individual files. But as you have to activate this for each file individually, this it somewhat defeats the point. There are more options in the pro version, but why then count it towards the limit for free users.
I hardly even use dropbox on mobile anyway, it just happens to be one of the most convenient ways to transfer pdfs to my iPad.
the limit is three.
I got rid of NAS backups and I have selective sync enabled on folders that I need synced. Large files remain in the cloud.
There are a few things that I think are worth paying for. Dropbox delivers every day, every hour with no worries of backups.
In terms of limiting devices, remember when iTunes introduced 5 authorized devices? Spotify Free has ads all over. Dropbox's business model is to convert free paying users by exemplifying the value that they provide without excessive nags, ads or annoyances.
I recall when GMail launched with 1 GB free data. That was HUGE and everyone switched from Hotmail and Yahoo mail to GMail. Little did an average user know and still doesn't know that Google is an advertisement company. You are the product.
Users have no right to complain about lack of features in a free service which doesn't serve ads, doesn't sell your data or have any other business model other than upsell you their product. I'll be the first one to quit using Dropbox if they get into advertisement business.
A price of $0 is just that - a price the company chose. The company could have chosen $10 or $100, but they didn't, because they thought $0 would help to maximize their profit.
There is nothing at all special about a price of $0. It's not a gift. It's an alternative to running Super Bowl commercials.
• Dropbox has failed to improve their offering and even for a paying customer you do not get anything more for your money today than you were getting several years ago. That is not objectively a bad thing, I mean a spoon has hardly evolved in hundred of years and is still worth every penny. But this is HN and that's a bit of a sin around here.
• In search of profitability Dropbox has used several dark marketting patterns. Its website also pushes way too much business/team option that are per user/per month. A lof of people on HN are private user and they basically have access to a single option.
• The new features that Dropbox did introduce work only for corporate/team user. There is now a Professional user but it costs a standard business plan for 2 users with less feature.
• There was some complain about the Mac OS client uses of apis.
Despite the negativity, HN users seems major paying users. So I think rather than negativity it is more disappointment. The feeling that Dropbox could have been so much more and they would have paid for it gladly, but it is instead becoming a network feature for large companies and startup.
I don't love my set of spoons like I love Dropbox, Digital Ocean, Eames Lounge Chair, Sublime Text/Merge and Teenage Engineering synthesizers. There are a handful of companies that give you immense pleasure in using their products daily.
I have slightly less data than the free limit and I'm getting a popup urging me to switch to the paid version almost constantly. I don't even bother to close it anymore, so it just sits there in the corner blocking a part of my screen.
Now can we get a .dropboxignore file for developers please? I don't need the temporary files in my projects being synced.
The clients for macOS and iOS are not as polished as Dropbox and many apps use Dropbox integrations, but I've managed to find workarounds for everything except 1Password, which is why I'm currently looking for alternative (preferrably open source) solutions for it.
For me the self hosting is not a problem and there are several hosted options available as well. (For example: https://www.hetzner.com/storage/nextcloud )
I haven't personally used it, but I've seen Bitwarden being highly recommended here. It's free and open source. It has a free option (with an account on bitwarden.com), a paid hosting option (with an account on bitwarden.com) and also a self-hosting option.
For how long will the previously linked devices remain linked...in other words, when will Dropbox force basic plan users to reduce the count to three? I foresee that happening in the future.
And what does this mean for people who change devices (like get a new phone to replace the old one)? Do they have to use the same device name or can they unlink the older device and link the new device in its place? This page does not talk about this scenario.
Seems like it's time to move out of Dropbox.