The Problem With Dropboxīut let’s start with the compelling event for all of this– Dropbox‘s increasing bloat and lack of focus on why people started using it in the first place. SyncThing, which I was only tangentially considering last year, now looks like it actually make a lot of things much easier for me–but, alas, not everything, since it has a few fatal flaws that Nikita didn’t cover in his piece. The reason I am doing so is that after reading Nikita Prokopov’s post I decided to revisit the issues I had with getting Dropbox and OneDrive to work for me, since despite having used Dropbox since the very beginning I started using OneDrive for a lot of my personal stuff even before I joined Microsoft (obligatory Disclaimer).Īnd over the years, I have grown more and more disillusioned with Dropbox and its ever-increasing bloat, and yet couldn’t find the right fit even as I got more and more into using OneDrive. Notes on that are now online, but the short of it is that it works well enough for now.īut I hope it’s worth it to pick up again and expand upon, because this time maybe (just maybe) my notes on this topic can be useful. Update: Two months later, I canceled my Dropbox subscription and moved to a OneDrive/SyncThing combo, almost exactly as described here. The main reason I ended up not cancelling my Dropbox subscription last year was awkward, and is simultaneously also the reason why this post has been an entire year in the making.
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