![]() ![]() It tends to want to sync folders rather than individual files which can eat up your drive space, sometimes the mere act of looking at a file will start it downloading (a massive ballache if you open a project that has media in it you have removed from your drive and don't need for your edit) and if you need to cancel downloading a large file to change to a different file it can be a pain. ![]() All S3 Glacier storage classes provide virtually unlimited scalability and are designed for 99.999999999 (11 nines) of data durability. a system that you are regularly pulling files from to go to remote users) it can be a pain if you've got limited space on your PC. The Amazon S3 Glacier storage classes are purpose-built for data archiving, providing you with the highest performance, most retrieval flexibility, and the lowest cost archive storage in the cloud. However, if you want to treat it as a file server, (i.e. ![]() What Dropbox is great at is backing up a system with an equivalent amount of storage - for example, if you have a 1tb drive locally, and you want that backed up, just set that drive to sync once and it'll synch that drive up in perpetuity, with no further input from you. In my experience, it depends on what you are using it for. ![]()
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