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Forum Discussion
Jon C.10
2 years agoCollaborator | Level 8
Disaster: Dropbox removing external disk support for Mac users :(
In case anyone's unaware... if you're a Mac user storing your Dropbox on an external drive, you'll shortly lose that ability. https://talk.tidbits.com/t/dropbox-drops-support-for-storing-files-on...
- 4 months agoHi Everybody,We’re excited to share that external drive support for Dropbox for macOS on File Provider is now available for testing as a beta feature. This is available to some users today and will be available to additional users on a rolling basis. In order to be eligible to test this feature, please follow the instructions in this Help Center article.Keep in mind that participation in beta programs is subject to the certain terms and conditions. There are certain additional participation requirements:
- This beta is only available to US-based users
- You must be on macOS 15 beta
- You must have an external drive that is APFS formatted and encrypted
Please let me know if you have any further questions!
ArthurPix
Collaborator | Level 10
Ru 1971 I agree with you that we're getting topic drift here.
Also, keeping on the topic of where Dropbox is stored-- isn't it interesting that not one user has commented that "I'm happy keeping my Dropbox on my Internal Drive." I for one am still paying for my MacBook Pro M1 Extreme, purchased in 9/2022. I purposely bought it loaded so I wouldn't have to buy another for at least 4 more years! But for me, "loaded" means "equipped with the fastest processor, 32 GB RAM and 2T Internal SSD."
I expect most users who recently upgraded their Mac have a similar story to tell. How much internal storage, I wonder, does the typical Mac power user buy? I've been ordering 2 terabytes going back to my Windows days.
So I have 2T on both desktop and laptop, both of which were purchased within the past year. On both, I rely on external storage to house all folders from online providers--with the exception of one folder containing data updated whenever I go through email.
Does anyone in this thread have more than 2T? If I'm right that the answer is "nearly nobody," our URGENT concern about support for external drives may be nearly universal among power users — and even more prevalent among casual users, who may have 256-512GB.
UKD
2 years agoExperienced | Level 12
ArthurPix I’ve got 4TB on my laptop but I did that for the express reason of transferring or needing access to large files if I travel and fast. Plus business was super good so I could splash the cash and upgrade everything I could, which I did, to the max. i9 processor, Radeon Pro 5500M graphics card, 64GB Ram etc etc.
At the time where I was the Government was also giving a 25% tax break on investment in equipment too so I did my whole company and bought new machines for everyone.
At no time was the dreaded 🦠 around or any hint of what was to come. I did also invest in external drives too and in fact all my staff mainly have 1TB internal drives with cloud storage on their 5TB external drives.
The biggest data users are my video guys. I moved them on to Windows PCs though a few years back because Apple didn’t have a machine powerful enough or had anything in the pipeline. They went from trash cans to full size desktop powerhouses. I don’t have to worry about them obviously and even then they’re equipped with a 1TB nvme internal, a secondary 2TB nvme internal AND an 8TB internal conventional hard drive.
Overkill I know but I just did because it was all cheap at the time.
At the time where I was the Government was also giving a 25% tax break on investment in equipment too so I did my whole company and bought new machines for everyone.
At no time was the dreaded 🦠 around or any hint of what was to come. I did also invest in external drives too and in fact all my staff mainly have 1TB internal drives with cloud storage on their 5TB external drives.
The biggest data users are my video guys. I moved them on to Windows PCs though a few years back because Apple didn’t have a machine powerful enough or had anything in the pipeline. They went from trash cans to full size desktop powerhouses. I don’t have to worry about them obviously and even then they’re equipped with a 1TB nvme internal, a secondary 2TB nvme internal AND an 8TB internal conventional hard drive.
Overkill I know but I just did because it was all cheap at the time.
- psalcal2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
OK here's an interesting thought. I now have gigabit up and down via fiber connection.
A while ago there were attached storage devices which one could essentially use to duplicate what you can do with Dropbox or similar. Does anyone have any recommendations for what else is out there? I remember the old WD drives which acted as online storage, but that was a while ago and those were not great. Anyone know what is out there which might work?
- ArthurPix2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
UKD I completely understand, would have done the same and did the same in my Windows days — when I typically had a 2T internal drive supplemented by secondary internal drives (a blessing for Windows users that I neglected to mention), sometimes in mirrored configuration, which I used for my online cloud providers, but didn't consider them internal although technically they were.
The differing configurations for Mac and Windows users have a lot to do with Windows instability, IMHO, since I typically used them for often-needed Acronis backups.
In any case, I wish there were a way in MacOS to denote at least one Thunderbolt external drive as internal!
- ArthurPix2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
psalcal I want to confirm what UKD just said. Yes, you can get what you describe with a NAS unit, and Synology is the name of the game, now that my (formerly) beloved Drobo has dropped off the map. Both the Drobo attached RAID (5D) and NAS RAID (5N) were simplicity itself, but the company may be in Chapter 11 now, and when they announced their 5D variants would not support MacOS Ventura, I dropped them like a hot rock, sprang for a much cheaper OWC Thunderbay and swapped out the drives from my Drobo, doing much the same with a Synology 1019+ NAS.
Reviews of the Synology line are almost universally glittering, but I'm here to tell you that DSM 7.2, the current release of Synology's operating system, takes some studying to understand, let alone master.
Android Police, one of my most trusted sources for tell-it-like-it-is reviews, says "Synology’s DiskStation Manager (DSM) is among the most feature-packed NAS operating systems out there" and, as usual, they are not only correct but may have understated the facts. DSM 7.2 is THE most feature-packed NAS OS that I have ever encountered.
However, I recently, inadvertently, activated a backup that Pac-manned all 31 terabytes of double-redundant RAID on my NAS in about 48 hours. In a panic, I uninstalled Synology Drive to stop this rogue juggernaut from crowding out all the other stuff the NAS has been doing. Then I spent the better part of two stressful days uncovering what I did wrong.
It should go without saying that, had I been relying on my feature-packed NAS for cloud storage, I would have been effed. Conclusion: I ain't nevah doing that!
If you, however, are bound and determined to do this, I recommend buying a smaller unit than mine and dedicating it ONLY to the one task of housing online storage. Configure it as a double-redundant RAID and give it one heck of a great UPS. Good Luck!
- psalcal2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
ArthurPix I have a few synology NAS devices at work and have used them in the exact opposite way.. they were used to store media which was then backed up (using Synology backup software) to cloud based services.
It's interesting this conundrum.. I have very much liked the option of just relying on dropbox for all the hard work, but at the same time I'm tempted to take it on myself.Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
- UKD2 years agoExperienced | Level 12ArthurPix psalcal I’ve used Dropbox as my main storage but then backed up those same files on my Synology NAS. I also have connected to the NAS a hard drive to back that data up too.
When you lose data once you don’t do it again and I learnt, backup, backup, backup. Failure to do so and you put your livelihood at risk.
When I was in the office I used my many NAS’s as the main storage and backed them up to Dropbox. Now the whole company works in the reverse as we all work from home now. Funny how things change. - UKD2 years agoExperienced | Level 12
ArthurPix if only Apple allowed that but sadly they're very restrictive, which I kinda get and has been one of their major pluses, they build the hardware and the software so it should just work, which it does nearly al of the time.
Sadly with advancements in technology I'm noticing the consumer is actually getting less choices. Even with this situation, whilst there will be 2 choices, don't upgrade but accept the lack of auto-downloading etc etc and other features (is that right?) or upgrade and lose the ability to store on an external drive. I don't really see a plus here for the customer.
Maybe that's what we have to accept for technology to move forward, I don't know, but they seem like sh*tty options to me, especially when other companies seem to have managed to allow external drives with their cloud offerings.
What I find amazing is that this topic is 38/39 pages deep so you'd think that someone may have taken notice and passed it up. The guy the other day said he had passed it up but the only answer was the same robotic one we've been getting for months. It seems they either don't care, can't be bothered or are just wishing we all go away.
Well it seems some of us are going away. Away from their subscriptions anyway. LOL. This is what businesses get for not listening or even engaging with their customers.
- UKD2 years agoExperienced | Level 12
psalcal yes I remember those. Never used one though.
You can do what you’re thinking off with a NAS. In the past they were a bit clunky but they’re much better nowadays. I have a Synology NAS and they’ve had Synology Drive out for quite a few years. I’m testing it out now as I have about 10TB of archival work that I am giving my team access to on the NAS instead of uploading it all to the cloud. I do know that Synology Drive does allow for external drive location AND selective syncing of files.
Depending on who you are sharing the files with and where they are based will depend on speed. If you have gigabit up and down just remember that if that is on a personal plan rather than a business plan your contention ratio may be much higher. That will slow down access in and out. It also depends on what you intend to do with it and how you ar sharing etc etc.
I am not using Synology Drive on a day to day basis for our day to day work. I just don’t want to spend any more money right now on expanding my storage capacity internally and I am not sure how it would work with my guys being on the other side of the planet. Oh and I run my internet on 5G would you believe. I have a tower literally across the road from me so I get a cracking signal and excellent speed.
- ArthurPix2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
UKD BTW, the Dropbox feature that you're emulating with your NAS — using it to share a single 10T folder with your team — seems to me much safer than turning your NAS into a permanent Dropbox. In fact, this is the sort of task for which a NAS is perfect.
NOTE: Personally I'd sleep better with the shared folder also backed up on an external drive, or at least protected on my NAS with a redundant RAID.
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