> Dropbox has the distinction of being the only cloud service—and perhaps the only startup—ever to compete simultaneously against Apple ($748 billion market cap), Google ($369 billion), Microsoft ($357 billion), Amazon ($173 billion), and Tencent ($160 billion).
> Unlike his amply financed competitors, which were all founded during the desktop computing era, Houston has been embedded in the cloud for eight years, ever since launching Dropbox in 2007.
> No one yet dominates the new global network, but Dropbox just may be the most adroit cloud company in the world, the one that has solved more problems for its users than any other.
Not saying press for dollars doesn't happen, but native advertising is something very specific. I highly recommend you familiarize yourself with the IAB's definition and recommended guidelines[1]. Large online brands follow these because they want to say they are IAB compliant for brand conscious advertisers with big media budgets.
I'm sure being a cheerleader for big companies with massive PR budgets is a nice revenue stream for these online media outlets.
I really hope no one is storing their financial records and health information on Dropbox...
You can try to get away from it, if you like. But then you're just wasting your time, faxing the same amount of data over immensely slow connections to your bank, who's just going to digitize it anyway and put it god knows where....
And anyone who has done this knows it's ALL time sensitive, and you have other responsibilities in life, so the most convenient/fastest method is the only real way of getting it done.
As far as worst case scenarios go, the financial system does a decent job of making you whole in the event of fraud, and doctors don't rely (solely) upon the stuff in your Dropbox account to make important medical decisions.
That's not to say there's no danger. There's obviously no shortage of Bad Things that could be done with your financial and medical information, but for most people, it's not much worse than the Bad Things that could be done with the photos they share on Facebook, the e-mails they archive in Gmail, or the phone numbers and addresses scattered across countless unsecured databases around the web. In fact, I'd argue that most Dropbox users would be more concerned about Dropbox leaking their private photos and letters than credit card statements and medical bills.
In 2015, the only sensible approach to security is to consider every machine you touch to be compromised, all the time. And yet I still store financial information on Dropbox - pay slips, bank records, mortgage documents, wills. Why would I care? I don't put download links to them on every email I send out of course, but if they would 'leak', it wouldn't make a material difference to my life. While the ease with which I can access and keep track of them does.
Same with medical information - what do I care that anyone knows how strong my prescription glasses are? Or if I'd got some serious disease tomorrow, what sort of treatment I get? I'd have to disclose if I wanted to get life insurance anyway.
I no longer see a rational reason for trying for absolute secrecy on things like this. The cat's out of the bag.
"Houston is also working hard to ensure that Dropbox feels like a collection of peers, at all levels of the company. It’s a philosophy that appeals to many Dropbox employees. On a chilly night in San Francisco’s Financial District, Ilya Fushman, head of business and mobile products, and Agarwal join Houston and me for dinner at the Battery, an exclusive restaurant and private club. Despite the posh surroundings, Fushman and Agarwal wax poetic about the egalitarian culture Houston and Ferdowsi have created. "It’s really hard to pull off creating an environment of peers," says Agarwal, a former engineering director at Facebook who oversaw the development of its News Feed. "We hold ourselves accountable to expectations, and at a bunch of companies, that ends up being centralized. Drew’s my boss, but I prefer to think of him as a peer and friend.""
I really don't know if the author was being facetious or the surroundings really did distort his perception of reality. But either way, as someone who grew up in a communist country, I really can't believe how people in SV are spewing these kind of second rate propaganda while keeping a straight face.
So, yeah, those are some extraordinary claims there, and nobody's going to check on them. Journalism is mostly dead in this country (except for some rare exceptions.)
But that surely doesn't extend to equity, where the founder holds an order of magnitude or two more than his VP of Engineering, who holds an order of magnitude more than his rank-and-file employee "peers" who built and continue to build the company towards success.
I am not sure if the group dynamic functions as peers, in that decisions and features and such are developed by discussion and there is mutual respect. However, I think Houston and Ferdowsi are more responsible for DB success than others and thus have a bigger slice of the Cap table.
If you're wondering who Tencent is, you're not alone:
http://www.thestreet.com/story/13095109/1/how-tencent-up-140...
They sold games on feature phones, then smartphones, then made WeChat, which is IM, I think, and massive in China. They also have a payment service, and the short version is, they're a competitor to Alibaba.
edit: typo and added: In fact, the two are mainly used by different classes.
That was simple in 2007, but this kind of synching model (also used by Google Drive and Microsoft OneDrive) doesn't feel simple anymore to me. Most applications still save files in other locations by default. Having to save them in your Dropbox, or having to move them to your Dropbox afterward, turns out to be a massive friction.
If the goal is that "Your whole computing environment ought to follow you around", you need to remove that friction. I know at least one person who lost access to some important files when she needed them because she forgot to drop them off in the right box.
One possibility would be to do what Microsoft does with Office 2014 and OneDrive, and try to force you to save all your files inside the synched folder. But that quickly gets annoying, especially since most people already have mountains of files stored and organized elsewhere.
That, and the lack of client-side encryption, is why I'm a loyal customer of a Dropbox competitor that allows me to sync any folder on any device with any other folder on any other device. I set it up to sync my entire $HOME partition, so I don't need to care where my apps store their files. That, Mr. Houston, is how you get me to hand over my "whole computing environment" to you.
This also bothered me so I looked for a solution. As much as I love Dropbox, I still have data stuck on external drives and NAS boxes. I looked at some Dropbox competitors but you always get that half-baked feeling with them. I sticked with Dropbox in the end (especially after they introduced the 1TB plans) but I still wanted to get the files from my external drive in there.
I tried symlinks which felt neat at first, only to later discover their nasty shortcomings: imagine the horror of files getting deleted when my external drive was disconnected. Symlinks also don't get the updates so in order to sync changes I always had to close and restart Dropbox. Back to square one.
In the end, all I wanted was a simple way to have files synced from my external drive and NAS, without having to worry about it or doing voodoo to get it working. That's why I created Boxifier (http://www.boxifier.com). I wanted a super easy, set-and-forget, "it just works" solution.
I think Dropbox doesn't get enough credit for solving the sync problem for the masses in a way that feels so simple. That simple that it's easy to forget that it is a hard problem in the first place.
I am an ashamed user of Dropbox still (see drop-dropbox someone posted below), because of inertia.
I know that that there is a high probability any three letter agency can access my unencrypted (and probably encrypted) data at Dropbox, but I suppose it is no worse than at Google Drive
You mean in the same way that IBM dominated personal computing (besting that little start-up Microsoft), and Microsoft dominated search (besting that little start-up, Google), and Google dominated social (besting that little start-up, Facebook)?
Turns out, no matter how big or successful you are, you can't dominate everything. That is something Dropbox has going for it in battling Google, Microsoft, Amazon, etc.