Dropbox Announcement: They're "Replacing the Hard Drive"
With the amount of devices that the average person works on, it can take a lot of effort to keep track of your files. I can't count the number of times I've hunted for the latest version of a file on my phone, computer, or in the cloud. Today, Dropbox announced their plan to put an end to all of that. The Dropbox Platform, announced at their developer conference, aims to “replace the hard drive.”
Most of us are already familiar with the basic premise of the Dropbox Platform: if you've ever edited anything online, and then accessed that same file from another computer, you've used basic cloud sync features. Dropbox hopes to make “sync the new save.” Instead of having files that only exist in one location, like your phone or computer, they hope to make all of your files available wherever you need them.
The actual announcement was full of technical details for us nerds, but what it boils down to is this: Dropbox is providing Nerds and programmers with new tools to build apps for you. These apps will be able to share the same data via your DropBox account. That means your email, documents, and even progress in your Angry Birds games, will be available whenever and wherever you want them.
At launch, companies using this technology include popular services such as Shutterstock, Yahoo! Mail, and FedEx, as well as a number of smaller companies. As developers have a chance to use these tools more, we'll start to see more apps include the ability to save to Dropbox. Dropbox hopes to integrate this feature into as many apps as possible.
The three components of the feature are the Sync API, the Datastore API, and Drop-Ins. The two APIs allow programmers to interact with a user's Dropbox data without actually giving them access to the data. Basically it's a set of rules designed so that programmers can help you, but not hack you. The third component, Drop-Ins, are another set of tools for developers that speed up the development process, so that the time before their app has Dropbox functionality is reduced, and takes less work.
Following concerns over users' privacy in the wake of the NSA PRISM scandal, Dropbox has stated “We’ve seen reports that Dropbox might be asked to participate in a government program called PRISM. We are not part of any such program and remain committed to protecting our users’ privacy.”
Also announced at the conference was that the Dropbox service has now grown to 175 million users.
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