I’ve been using iCloud Drive as my default syncing solution for a few years now, and the desktop sync was a key reason. This news from Dropbox comes at a time when iCloud has finally launched folder sharing with iOS 13.4.
It will also be beneficial when switching to an iPhone or iPad as all of a user’s files will be available. Some of the users I support have thousands of files in their downloads, so this would make it easy to migrate to a new Mac (or access all of their files from the web). Instead of having to re-train people to store documents in a Dropbox folder for syncing, files can be stored in the big three 3 locations.
The default place for a lot of people’s document storage is on the desktop. This feature will likely be very popular with enterprise Dropbox users as it will then become a quasi backup solution. I am still trying to wrap my head around how Dropbox is going to keep this integrated with macOS so the user doesn’t notice some strange things happening. Once enabled, there will be a My Mac folder in your dropbox that will contain all of your downloads folder.
In my testing (download folder only), it worked as advertised. Until now, Dropbox was limited to syncing its folder, but the latest Dropbox beta shows the company is expanding beyond being a ‘folder that syncs.’ĭropbox on the Mac has slowly been expanding its feature set and how it works, and today, the latest beta adds the option to sync your documents, downloads, and desktop. I love being able to drop a file on the desktop and have it appear everywhere. I have found the desktop syncing to be highly useful since I have a MacBook Pro at home and one at work along with iOS devices. One of the key differences between iCloud and Dropbox is that iCloud will sync the native macOS documents folder along with your desktop.