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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://help.dropbox.com/installs/macos-support-for-expected-changes
Just confirmed this with DB support (see below). Gutted - been with Dropbox for years and our entire video team flow is based around it 😕
>Hi there, I read today that you are scrapping the ability to store the Dropbox folder on external disks, on OSX. I'd like to ask more about this please.
> Hello Jon, and thank you for contacting Dropbox Support. My name is Joseph, and I will be more than happy to look into your request, right away.
That is correct Jon, as part of the Dropbox for macOS update, the Dropbox folder must be located in ~/Library/CloudStorage.
>This is a showstopper for us, and will mean we have to move to another service. We have a large distributed team using DB for video work, no way it'll fit within internal drives.
Is there a workaround?
> I totally understand and I apologize for the inconvenience. Unfortunately, there is no workaround on this as changing the location of your Dropbox folder is no longer supported by macOS.
>This change doesn't seem to have hit us yet - we're running a variety of machines inc Ventura
What will trigger its enforcement? Can we stay on an earlier OS or Dropbox version?
>The updates happening automatically every time the Dropbox app is restarting, for example if your device never restarts it should maintain the older version but we can't guarantee full functionality on older versions of the application.
>So what will happen - if we have a Dropbox folder on an 8TB drive and a tiny internal drive - will it try to clone stuff across and eat up the space? What's the mechanism?
>That's right, it will try to move the content on your internal drive until it has no space and gives you an error.
>Is Smartsync still supported? I.e. will it move stuff to being online only if it won't fit?
>It is, however it is now known as online-only.
- Hi Everybody,We’re 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!
697 Replies
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- UKD3 years agoExperienced | Level 12camner when did you leave? Only asking out of curiosity. And I think you’ll find there’s quite a few of us who agree with you about this whole debacle.
And I agree that sync is less featured but I kinda feel that’s the point. Simple, streamlined and does exactly what it says on the tin. No frills, no fuss and no ‘features’ that users use, not that I know of anyway.
That’s a thought. How many people use Paper, Sign or Capture or any of the other ‘features’?
I only use Send. I find that excellent in fact. I think they did a good job on that but I don’t use the rest. In fact I only just installed capture for a call I have to record next week, and if it wasn’t for that I would never have used it. - ArthurPix3 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
UKD Ru 1971 shinbeth camner So… today I canceled my Dropbox auto renewal.
I’m already paid up through mid-November 2023, so this doesn’t mean I’m dropping 😎 off the map — at least not for the next six months — but I’ve moved all supported folders to my new service, and am now no longer fearful of having my online storage pulled off my external drive.
I MIGHT come back if Dropbox commits to external drive support. But honestly, I can’t see much advantage to doing so. Here are my priorities:
SPEED. My new service is approximately as fast as Dropbox or, anyhow, as fast as I need.
SECURITY. My new service has REAL end-to-end, TNO (trust no one) encryption, meaning their engineers couldn’t hand anyone else the keys even if they wanted to.
2-FACTOR. It supports 2-factor authentication via Google, MS or Authy.
SHARING. It offers free accounts up to 5 GB, which is big enough for pretty much anyone outside the service with whom I want to share data.
S-P-A-C-E. For the same price I’m paying Dropbox for 3 Terabytes of storage, I now get 6 Tb.
Again, I haven’t totally pulled the plug on Dropbox. I’m still paid up for the next six months, and will periodically bring my Dropbox up to date just so that I have a safety net. However, I doubt I’ll need it.I’ve already switched over my iPhone, iPad and MacBook Pro, and will switch my desktop Mac Studio in another week.
Water’s fine!
And, of course, I’m staying here in the Dropbox community to help out anyone who asks!
- jmeredi23 years agoHelpful | Level 6
I am testing out Sync now as well and it seems to work great, except for the speed. Uploading and downloading is capped at 40Mbps, which is especially slow for downloading. It still seems to be the best alternative, but I hope they will increase the speed cap in the future, since it's very slow for everyday use with large files.
- Bookpast3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
I'm also testing out Sync right now on one of my machines and plan to move my entire system over in the next few days.
Never thought I'd be saying goodbye to Dropbox, especially after nearly 14 years of trusted service both for business and personal use. But this disaster has opened my eyes to the competition.
I want end to end encryption without my files being analyzed by third parties. I want simplicity without the clutter of features I don't use. And most of all, I need to be able to store my own files locally wherever I deem necessary.
The assistance from everyone here in this community has been enormously helpful. Thank you. Seriously. 👍 - UKD3 years agoExperienced | Level 12
Vive la revolution!!
- ArthurPix3 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
jmeredi2 zI certainly understand your concern about the speed. I fear that true end to end encryption may exact a price in file mirroring. For me it’s more than worth it, because my main use case is sharing data among my own 5 different, equally used, devices, which doesn’t require lightning speed. Every few days, I may also need to share data with coworkers, which also can take place at a more leisurely pace. But my main concern is that I want everyone in my business to be able to share data while backing it up offline, WITHOUT paying thousands of dollars for offline storage. And this can only happen when my storage service allows for offline storage on external devices. Unfortunately, Apple sells internal storage at $400/terabyte, while Samsung (for example) will sell you an SSD for about $130/2 Terabytes plus the nominal cost of an enclosure. When I buy my partner an M2 Mac Mini Pro with 512GB internal SSD, I want her to be able to add 6T of storage for $400 instead of $2400!
- ArthurPix3 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
camner UKD Jon C.10 Bookpast You’re right to be shunning OneDrive, as I have discovered that this once-trusted service has CORRUPTED EVERY SINGLE PDF FILE to which I entrusted it! Think of this! Whenever I received an email that I wished to preserve, I converted it to a PDF. And now, every single PDF that I created for years is unreadable! If I could sue Microsoft, I would, but of course I am prevented by their TOS! This is why I Transferred all of my OneDrive files to dropbox, but now I find that I must in turn transfer my dropbox files. It’s a sad, hard lesson. I’m going to save all my DropBox files to my NAS, in addition to copying them to my new service. TRUST NO ONE!
- apfund3 years ago
Dropbox Product Manager
Hi Arthur, While I cannot comment on many of the points you mentioned, there is one thing that I can add: My team is currently working on zero knowledge, end-to-end encryption, natively integrated with Dropbox for business customers. While I can't confirm a specific timeline or roadmap or pricing at the moment, I want to assure you that we are aware of your need for this native integration. Also, we (and especially I personally) read your comments/wishes/ideas and all feedback shared in this forum related to end-to-end encryption. I'm also sharing everything I see and read here internally and will make sure that your voice is heard. - fjazzfjazz3 years agoCollaborator | Level 9
apfund what started all of this is that Dropbox might not support external drives anymore.
How can Sync.com support it?
All of this turmoil would be over if Dropbox can at least confirm that somehow, it will always continue to support external drives.
Do you have any word on this matter?
- pampy3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
At last, a response from the dropbox team, but sadly none of it was about external drive support. Can you please tell what you guys are currently working about this ordeal.
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