Reader Dwayne Norris has a problem with Dropbox links. He writes: A friend sent me a link to a movie file they’d like to share with me on Dropbox. The link appears ...
Before Dropbox became popular, there was iDisk, which was Apple’s cloud storage system. iDisk allowed you to store documents, pictures, QuickTime files, and PDFs in one cloud-based “drive.” This was ...
Cloud storage services like Dropbox have made it a snap to move large files around, but that convenience is generally predicated on having the client software installed on whatever PC you are working ...
While Dropbox public links are very useful for sharing files with your friends, a lot of files (text files, MP3s, PDFs, and others) will automatically open up in their browser. Here's how to get them ...
We recently went through some of the best ways to share files with a nearby computer, and many of you noted that Dropbox can still be a viable syncing method, even over Wi-Fi. Here's how to set it up.
If you send somebody a Dropbox link, then they don’t just get the file you meant to send them. They are given an opportunity to go through the whole Dropbox Experience. Images may be presented in a ...