How does icloud compared to dropbox
More features are coming in the fall with iCloud Drive and iOS 8, promising drag and drop syncing, simultaneous multi-app editing and family sharing. This will also coincide with better prices and options for storage and more robust sharing features, especially for iOS users.
However, there is no support for Android, at least not yet. Google's cloud services feature a combination of cheap storage and office production software for creating documents, presentations, spreadsheets, forms, drawings and folders with simple sharing. Their free Google Drive app adds drag and drop syncing and the flexibility to continue working even when offline. Drive is also integrated with Gmail for seamless saving of files and attachments. One unique feature for Drive will help you go paperless by allowing your Android device to scan documents and automatically convert them to PDFs.
Microsoft's cloud solution is most similar to Google Drive, in that it also offers storage combined with integration of their Office suite for online and offline editing, co-authoring and syncing. Microsoft does make considerations for photo sharing with online and email slideshow but pale in comparison to more mainstream photo apps. Since OneDrive is built into Windows 8, users also have exclusive access to features like smart syncing, camera roll and PC backup and Windows Store integration.
Dropbox does one thing and does it well. It provides virtual synced storage that will hold anything you put in your folders, for easy sharing and retrieval on any machine. With both iCloud and Dropbox, the process of uploading and syncing files is generally simple and easy.
You can upload to either using the desktop app, mobile app, or web browser interface. It seamlessly integrates with the way Macs, iPhones, and iPads organize files. Simply put, the more Apple devices you use, the more useful iCloud will be to you.
The iCloud app for Windows is clunky and difficult to work with, and the interface for accessing it through a web browser is very basic compared to competitors. Dropbox, however, integrates well with both Mac and Windows computers, with your Dropbox folder working nicely with Finder or Windows File Explorer, respectively. It also has a useful and intuitive app for a wide range of mobile phones and tablets. All users, even those on the free plan, can talk to a support technician over the phone, and when we checked, the wait time was just two minutes.
With Dropbox, phone support is only available to Business Teams users. All users on paid plans can contact tech support via email and expect a response within a day. But users on the free plan have no way of contacting tech support and so are limited to the chatbot. So, in terms of being able to contact support, Apple wins. Planning to sign up for the Pro plan now. The only downside I see is that for backing up WhatsApp etc.
So basically at the end of it, I am not too happy that I will be paying Dropbox, Apple, Google and Microsoft all for their services. Oh and let me not start thinking about the video and audio streaming service subscriptions to add to this! Clearly, the tech companies have found ways of making far more money by moving everything online now! I had a similar conundrum. I keep Gsuite for my freelance business. But my issue was around personal device storage options. I had Dropbox for years, but their prices kept going up and they failed to allow sharing of storage space with family members unless you bought a business package.
I then decide to go all-in with Apple, it works very well and my family devices which are all Apple just play nicely. In the long-run I think as consumers we will have to make a platform choice to benefit from the conveniences offered by AI. Dropbox will need to do something smart strategically not to keep losing users to Google, Apple and Microsoft.
A big difference for those who are not geeks: there is no phone help or screen-sharing on Dropbox, only chat text, while you can talk to real humans who speak English on the Apple help line and screen-share. I could not get Dropbox work on a Mac, obviously because of lack of help features on Dropbox I am not a Geek. So I dropped Dropbox pun intended!
I had the misfortune to think that iCloud would be an intelligent way to keep my files safe and accessible. It caused me months of headache, months of payjng for a service i couldnt use and more hassle to get everything back on to my computer — even IT people couldnt understand why connection and download was so bad.
I havent tried Dropbox. Just made the switch over from Dropbox to iCloud. Not looking back. And even when just uploading using the desktop client, it crashes. With iCloud photos are seamlessly uploaded.
After getting a new Macbook, and restoring from a backup, I could not get my iCloud drive to sync. I tried everything, and tech is my career. Just switched to Dropbox, and no problems. After iCloud stopped syncing on my MacPro running Max El Capitan in the middle of a project, I am currently shifting over to dropbox, especially after finding out, that dropbox now even desktop, download and document shares and this also in a better way on El Capitan than iCloud does.
I am switching away from Dropbox. For one thing the amount of CPU Dropbox takes is staggering. I used to use a MacBook Pro with Dropbox and have talked to them about this issue for many years. They said I needed a faster computer. To run a file sharing program. The computer was fast enough for video editing but not for Dropbox. For the last two months Dropbox has been unable to import a few videos from my iPhone. It tries every time the phone is plugged in and takes about 40 min.
Support has tried for two months to address my problem but to no avail. I had the same problems as yours, so I switched to iCloud, now I have a lot more problems. So far , if you delete a file from one of your devices connected to iCloud e. This is one of the biggest flaws of iCloud.
Trying to decide which to keep. If I understand correctly, the one thing I like about Dropbox is I can decide which files i want on my hard drive and which files to keep in the cloud. Dropbox is an absolute battery hog on MB Pros. For that reason alone I am considering dropping it. Wave FreshBooks vs. Xero FreshBooks vs. QuickBooks Online Xero vs. Dropbox Review. Visit Dropbox. Visit Dropbox Dropbox Review Dropbox. Visit iCloud iCloud Review iCloud.
Visit iCloud. Dropbox offers more features and offers a simple, easy-to-use interface on all platforms, including on Mac and iOS.
However, iCloud offers greater integration for Apple device owners, making it easier to share and sync your files. For other device users, Dropbox simply has more to offer, even if you decide to pay a little bit more for the privilege. As a third-party service, Dropbox requires a few more steps to set it up, including creating an account and installing the desktop or mobile app.
Both Dropbox and iCloud offer cloud storage, but Dropbox does offer more features, with Office integration, better file sharing and file versioning available. Dropbox is a great platform, even on a Mac. Casual users may enjoy the simplicity that iCloud offers, especially as photos, videos and music are all synced automatically.
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