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
Anna R.5
3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Dropbox support for macOS 12.3
So I'm referring to https://help.dropbox.com/installs-integrations/desktop/macos-12-monterey-support
Does this mean it will be 100% safe to upgrade to macOS 12.3 as long as I keep Smart sync to Loc...
- 3 years ago
You can never ever say its 100% safe - simply because you'd be using a Beta OS and also a Beta version of Dropbox. However, it should work well, but, be cautious of the fact it is beta at all levels.
I know previously at last minute notice Apple have changed how stuff worked in beta versions meaning stuff which used to work no longer did when updated to the next release so thats also something to be aware of.
DBgreen1
Helpful | Level 6
Can you bring us any further clarification on the status of a macOS 12.3-compatible Dropbox, now we're nearly into mid-March and Apple is expected to announce the upgrade next week?
Will all Dropbox users be automatically notified when a compatible version is released?
Thank you.
Walter
3 years agoDropbox Staff
Hi all - thanks for reaching out.
I just wanted to mention that we’re actively working on full support for macOS 12.3
In the meantime, you’ll still be able to open Dropbox files by double-clicking them in Finder.
To make an online-only file available to open in third-party applications, use the following steps :
1. From Finder, Right-click(or control-click) the file you wish to open.
2. Select “Make available offline”
You should now be able to open your files without issue.
You can find more details in the dedicated Help Center article.
I hope this helps!
I just wanted to mention that we’re actively working on full support for macOS 12.3
In the meantime, you’ll still be able to open Dropbox files by double-clicking them in Finder.
To make an online-only file available to open in third-party applications, use the following steps :
1. From Finder, Right-click(or control-click) the file you wish to open.
2. Select “Make available offline”
You should now be able to open your files without issue.
You can find more details in the dedicated Help Center article.
I hope this helps!
- cbonargent3 years agoHelpful | Level 7
Hello,
So is Dropbox still actively working on full support for macOS 12.3 (Monterey) and higher, or is it definitively “over” and Smart Sync, etc. will no longer function in the future w/macOS ?
I’m still willing to stay a bit longer in macOS 12.3 if there is a solution coming eventually, but if this is not the case, it would be better and more forthcoming for Dropbox to announce it to us now.
Please give us, as paying subscribers, a chance to find a solution if Dropbox is no longer planning to actively working on this problem.
@Walter
@Megan
@Hannah
@Nancy
Thank you in advance for your diligence!
- G-Tech3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
It seems the limitations come from macOS 12.3+ related issues with regards to cloud synchronization. Besides Dropbox, I have GoogleDrive, OneDrive and iCloud Drive installed as well, and they are working no better:
- GoogleDrive implements a dirty workaround with a local, virtual SMB server. This is really "dirty" since macOS' SMB implementation is also buggy, so it leads to even more issues and degraded performance
- OneDrive seems to be the only solution that fully relies on macOS' native cloud sync, so it comes with all the limitations (similar to what iCloud Drive has): your offline files cannot be stored on external devices anymore. So, if you need a larger set of offline files and your internal HDD has limited capacity, you're screwed. macOS' native cloud sync stores offline files in the user's Library folder only, and there is no way to change that. In addition, OneDrive's sync engine is not only slow, but also error-prone and leads to sync conflicts pretty often, even if you're the only one working with a file.
- iCloud Drive: it definitely works the worst: no chance to define where to store offline files, super-slow sync with standstills sometimes for hours. Restoring broken or deleted files just works if you're lucky, mostly the files are gone forever.
Although I am heavily impacted by the limitations the Dropbox client has these days, it is still clearly the most reliable cloud sync solution for macOS.
The workaround for Dropbox is to get a large enough (external) HDD and then make all the folders that contain files you need to open outside Finder available offline. This also solves the issues with embedded assets in Adobe documents.
- cbonargent3 years agoHelpful | Level 7
The workaround for Dropbox is to get a large enough (external) HDD and then make all the folders that contain files you need to open outside Finder available offline. This also solves the issues with embedded assets in Adobe documents.
@G-Tech — yes I've come to the same 'solution', through a long chat I had with one of the Dropbox techniciens but also because that's the way I've been working from the start, on my iMac (2021): all my "everyday" folders are local with the green icon (have always been) and the rest is online only with access through the web portal only. I just wanted everything on my iMac to sync continuously.
But ever since I got the last (2021) MacBook Pro a few weeks ago, and I have a mini-network going, I understand the Dropbox problem more fully, the 'pain' it might be of not having cloud files (blue icon) that sync continuously, with nothing local. Of course with 1To of storage on the Macbook, I will eventually transform these cloud files to local 'green icon' ones and work like that if there is no other solution upcoming.
I was glad to have Monterrey 12.1 on the laptop, and not the latest macos, so everything works fine for now, but sooner or later, maybe with Big Sur, I'll have to update the systems. I hope there is some news at that point. The technicien at the other end of the chat assured me they were still working on the problem.
Thanks for the info!
- DBgreen13 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Having purchased an M1 iMac a few months ago, I opted in to automatically receive Dropbox Apple Silicon beta updates.
I am currently on version 145.2.3154. Could it be this beta is already MacOS 12.3 compatible?
- DBgreen13 years agoHelpful | Level 6
I've had TWO beta updates since that last post. Now up to 146.2.9.
So we must be getting close to D-Day!
- DBgreen13 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Another week passes and not so much as a drop of new information.
Maybe we can speed things up if we all band together and get the poor DB team a brand spanking new Mac Studio Ultra?
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