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Forum Discussion
Jon C.10
3 years agoCollaborator | Level 8
Dropbox removing external disk support for Mac users
In case anyone's unaware... if you're a Mac user storing your Dropbox on an external drive, you'll shortly lose that ability.
https://talk.tidbits.com/t/dropbox-drops-support-for-storing-files-...
- 2 years agoHi Everybody,Weâre excited to share that external drive support for Dropbox for macOS on File Provider is now available for testing as a beta feature. This is available to some users today and will be available to additional users on a rolling basis. In order to be eligible to test this feature, please follow the instructions in this Help Center article.Keep in mind that participation in beta programs is subject to the certain terms and conditions. There are certain additional participation requirements:
- This beta is only available to US-based users
- You must be on macOS 15 beta
- You must have an external drive that is APFS formatted and encrypted
Please let me know if you have any further questions!
beenyweenies
2 years agoHelpful | Level 7
No one who actually understands data management would call a Synology NAS backed up to IDrive a âclever experiment.â This setup is just a lower priced version of what major corporations are doing with their data every day, and what you yourself claim to be doing with your Apple-provided internal drive backed up to Dropbox. And FYI I still benefit from being able to use Time Machine as you keep mentioning, my TM backups are just created on my NAS, then backed up to the iDrive, so I have incredible redundancy built in.
Either way, please note that my post very clearly did not say my way was THE ONLY way, I made it clear that it was just an option for people to consider.
And finally, I question your technical experience on this issue. You keep talking about editing/transporting 8k video etc. I am working with 8k/12k EXR files in a high-end VFX pipeline so I know all too well how these files behave and what the workflow is/should be. And you do NOT need 3,000MB/s reads to edit 8k video. Period. Many raw 8k formats top out at about 250MB/s and most professionals using 8k are working with proxies when their workflows require more than a few streams. I have never felt any throughput limitation working with massive EXR sequences directly from my NAS and its 900MB/s read speed.
So honestly that just leaves the cable. Well, not sure what to say on this. Most people are working at a desk, so the idea of attaching a cable to their machine just isnât that problematic. You make it sound like itâs some risky, cumbersome, inconvenient thing to deal with. How is your machine connected to your external monitor? A cable. Not a big deal. Not risky. Not inconvenient. And because Synology Drive has Dropbox-like features you can sync files locally if you need to work remotely.
Anyway, to each their own. Iâm not here to convince anyone to do things my way. Iâm just trying to provide people with viable options.
ArthurPix
2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
Moreover, beenyweenies , anyone who insists that the presence of cables negates a good user experience must not like the security and speed of connecting to their Internet provider with underground fiberoptic and Cat6A! Iâve had only one connection failure in ten years with this setup, and envy your high-speed NAS connection.
- shinbeth2 years agoExperienced | Level 13
You know ArthurPix the whole cable thing is hilarious to me. I'm over here living the dream with Dropbox and my trusty Mac driveâno wires, no drama. And then there's you, with your high-tech setup, which, if I recall correctly, took a nosedive that one time. Quite the adventure, huh? Props for owning up to it, though. It's like a tech horror story, but with a good sport as the protagonist.
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