You might see that the Dropbox Community team have been busy working on some major updates to the Community itself! So, here is some info on what’s changed, what’s staying the same and what you can expect from the Dropbox Community overall.
Forum Discussion
chrismo
6 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Maximum download and upload speeds
I'm setting up a new computer and syncing my dropbox business account to it. The internet connection is great on fiber optic cable (1500MB/s) but my download speeds on dropbox are about 24MB/sec Wha...
- 6 years ago
That won't do you any good. There are so many things that affect speed that you could have two people with an identical setup and still have wildly different speeds. Your computer, your local network, your ISP, the route your traffic takes to get to Dropbox, the Dropbox network and servers, congestion along any part of the route to Dropbox, throttling by your ISP (very common), failures along the route that cause your traffic to take another path, etc.
Simply put, there is no expected speed. You get whatever speed you're capable of given all the factors above, and many others.
chrismo
Helpful | Level 6
I found that if I turn my VPN on, then my transfer rates get a bit better. They jump from 20MB/s to 70MB/s so I my ISP Bell Canada seems to be throttling dropbox traffic. Which is odd because they don't throttle Google drive.
I think it would be good to list what kind of speeds people get with different setups just so that they know the range and what to expect.
On a 12 Core Powermac with 950Mbps download speed I get 70MB/s
Everyone share your stats so we can know better what to expect.
Rich
6 years agoSuper User II
That won't do you any good. There are so many things that affect speed that you could have two people with an identical setup and still have wildly different speeds. Your computer, your local network, your ISP, the route your traffic takes to get to Dropbox, the Dropbox network and servers, congestion along any part of the route to Dropbox, throttling by your ISP (very common), failures along the route that cause your traffic to take another path, etc.
Simply put, there is no expected speed. You get whatever speed you're capable of given all the factors above, and many others.
- One800J5 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Nope. You're all wrong. WRONG I say! ;) Dropbox is capping bandwidth ever since everyone started working from home. 20MB up, 40MBps down. I was getting 100-110MBps both ways, anytime, always consistant. Now... it sucks. Moving on to another company.
Done.
- u_kadru5 years agoCollaborator | Level 9
I'm interested to know what other service will give you near gigabit speeds? Google drive file stream has way less speed than Dropbox on a bad day. I can only see Onedrive as a viable option but haven't tested their maximum speeds.
- dandidandi5 years agoNew member | Level 2
Riddle me this Rich, why am I getting 100mbps on Drive File Sync and 22mbps on Dropbox, same computer, same time of day, same connection?
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