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Forum Discussion
Matthew S.
10 years agoNew member | Level 1
End of support for OS X 10.4 and 10.5
Why pull support and remove functionality? Why not just drop support -- just stop updating the app but still allow basic functionality? There are still a lot of legacy machines that are still in use and CANNOT upgrade to 10.6, as they are PowerPC based. Yes, old systems still work. Why stop the app from working totally instead of just deprecating support for those systems?
- Michal M.New member | Level 1
Someone just mentioned that Mac users love their "ancient antique machines." Actually our machines are neither ancient nor antique! They are just well-built and robust, qualities lost for the most part in our modern age. I've had to replace hard drives on the cheap PCs for others I work with almost every year and I now have a stack of much younger PC laptops paid for by you Mr. and Mrs. Taxpayer waiting to be junqued. Is that kind of planned obsolescence something we see as desirable, logical? On the other hand, I can't seem to kill my Macs. Hell, my own original LCII from 96 still runs! But my very expensive, very stable G5 tower, while yes, a decade old, is a workhorse and can link up to any of a number of also decade old scientific equipment (that you wouldn't want us to have to replace every 2-3 years!!) Dropbox ceasing to serve legacy Mac users may actually seriously impair U.S. (and perhaps beyond) scientific progress as I imagine there are many such machines running <OS10.6 in service to research endeavors. We're not playing games and storing and exchanging cookie recipes & vacay pics here! This will be a serious impairment.
- David T.75New member | Level 1
I used SpiderOak until it stop working on my PPC. As soon as my son is back home from college (for summer break) I will be discontinuing my paid dropbox account. My solution is to use my FileTransporter to share files (I have been using the transporter for about two years). I would suggest getting a cheap Mac Mini so yo can run Lion. Then buy 2 transporters and use the MacMini as a bridge to your PPC. Currently I have a G5s, G4s, and G3s accessing the FileTransporter folder (on the MacMini) via a alias on the desktop of each PPC. Works like a charm. There is an initial cost to go this solution. But once done, you don't have fork over any more money. For mother's day weekend, you can get two Transporter Sync for the price of one, with the special code: MOTHERSDAY. Here is the URL to the store: http://filetransporterstore.com/collections/products/products/transporter-sync-2-pack
- Richard SchlettyCollaborator | Level 8
If older vehicles were not allowed to travel the streets and highways, there would be a huge outcry. Dropbox, you must have at least one clever programmer who can figure out how to keep PPC Macs flowing on the Dropbox "information highway." Step forward. Be brave. Bust into the boardroom and declare your intelligence to knucklehead management. PowerPC Macs running 10.4 and 10.5 are very capable machines. They are not obsolete. My two G5 towers keep on working.
- ronald b.New member | Level 1
dropbox not working on my computer anymore and I have no possibity for an update to a newer system. Big, big problem. Dropbox should bring back its services to customers with older computers / systems (eg. OS 10.5.8).
Dropbox wants to be a smart digital service, I think. There must be smart solution for this problem?
Regards- Robert S.Super User alumni
I'm afraid the bottom line is that there must inevitably come a point where it's simply no longer a viable proposition to continue supporting an obsolete operating system. In the case of OS X 10.4/10.5, for sound technical reasons, that point has now been reached.
Please see: https://www.dropbox.com/help/8058
- ronald b.New member | Level 1
thanks for the reply and the link.
What a pity that the technical reasons are too big to solve. - Robert S.Super User alumni
The first-party vendor, namely Apple, haven't supported 10.4 and 10.5 for over half a decade.
That includes the tools, development environment and software libraries necessary for Dropbox to work on those platforms.
Moving forward, it's simply no longer a tenable position.
- Mike P.16New member | Level 1
CREATE A PAID VERSION FOR "LEGACY" TECHNOLOGY like the PPC. Instead of dropping support for Power PC Macs, why don't you just create a paid version for legacy products, and fund the programming with that income source. Surely there are some enthusiastic programmers out there who would see this as a great chance to get going, and you would find a way to not piss off thousands of people like me who have years invested in this technology and see no reason to up and dump it all because you made a business decision to leave us behind.
Think about it, at least. - Randolph H.New member | Level 1
This is really quite comical. Those using the newest Macs are most likely not using them for important tasks, so DropBox caters to that audience. Meanwhile, those using their Macs for serious work (video editing, graphic design, photo-editing, etc...) are thrown out of the loop. How do I know this? Logic. We professionals have a fortune invested in software, peripherals, and the very expensive PPC workstations that just ten years ago were "state of the art". As the owner of a video production company, I purchased several turnkey video editing workstations, and software costing as much as a new car.
In 2003, Apple's Steve Jobs had this to say: "The PowerPC G5 changes all the rules. This 64-bit race car is the heart of our new Power Mac G5, now the world's fastest desktop computer". Two years later, Apple kills the PowerPc, and Intel Macs were born; support for our favorite apps fell like dominoes. But we remained loyal, purchasing updates, fixing our machines, and adding storage. In turn, the companies to which our loyalties were directed, apologized, told us to buy new computers, and not only dropped support but crippled their own apps residing on our computers (DropBox included). Nice...very nice!
And now, in response to another poster, the DropBox system requirements on the Windows side are:
Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 8.1
For those with no knowledge of Windows XP, it was released 14 years ago in 2001. Explain THAT one, DropBox. - Joseph R.1New member | Level 1
It seems like not a day goes by that I don't receive some update from this thread, which I could and do intend to "Unfollow" in the near future. I myself was one of the earliest to post under this thread and do miss Dropbox support on my PPC Macs, but you people are beating a dead horse at this point!
I have seen the argument that Dropbox has simply dropped PPC support for no reason whatsoever. Consider that Dropbox is a business, and as a business that provides a software product to its consumers, Dropbox wants to reach as many consumers at once as possible. Toward that end, it makes good business sense to support the latest versions of the most popular operating systems. In the Microsoft Windows world, there are many tools that make it possible to support every version of Windows from Windows XP through the forthcoming Windows 10, but in the Apple ecosystem, Dropbox most likely has to rely on Apple's own XCode. In order to provide the best support for the latest version of OS X, it's best practice to use the latest version of XCode, which according to Wikipedia is version 6.3. It should come as no surprise that this version does not support compiling to PPC/Universal Binary. As I understand it, the last version of XCode that supports compiling to PPC/Universal Binary is version 3.2.6, which would be from the Mac OS X 10.6.x Snow Leopard era (incidentally the last version of Apple's desktop operating system to support PPC binaries at all). If Dropbox is going to provide the best support for the latest versions of OS X, then they will by necessity be using a version of XCode that does not support PPC.
I've also seen the argument that Dropbox should dedicate a small team to maintaining support for PPC machines. As of this writing, this thread has 170 replies and 85 followers. If I were Dropbox, I'd view that as a minority. In order to continue support for our aging PPC machines, Dropbox would need to dedicate hardware for writing and compiling code under XCode 3.2.6 as well as real PPC hardware for testing that code. They would also need to dedicate live, human programmers and beta testers to the project. They may already have the equipment lying around, but they'd need to set aside office space for that equipment, pay for the electricity to run that equipment (some of which would be nowhere near as energy efficient as any equivalent modern equipment), and pay the programmers and beta testers salaries/wages and potentially benefits for a platform that offers little if any return on investment. If I were a business looking to save a little money, I know where I'd be looking to trim the budget.
Another argument that I've seen is that Dropbox should simply allow the older PPC client software to communicate with their servers. Dropbox's own claim as to why this is impossible is that they are planning to make changes in the future that aren't backward compatible with the older client. That answer is a bit vague to me, but I think I can make a fair, educated guess as to what that ultimately means. Consider that all software contains bugs. With thousands or even millions of lines of code, it's simply impossible to squash every little bug. If at some point in the future, a bug was found in the older Dropbox client that we were using on out PPC machines, that bug could open an attack vector to Dropbox itself, which would affect more than just us PPC users. It makes good security sense for Dropbox to simply close that door before any such bug is discovered and actively work to develop newer communication protocols for upcoming versions of the Dropbox client. Running separate servers for two different versions of the client (i.e. modern and legacy) would provide no additional security benefits since the service would need to be seamless across both client platforms.
I understand that many of the remaining PPC users who are currently so upset with Dropbox have a rather large investment in both hardware and productivity software. An excellent example would any PPC user in graphics design. Such a user would likely have a fairly nice PowerMac G4 or G5 running a ludicrously expensive version of Adobe Photoshop. These users could easily have thousands of dollars tied up in the very tools of their livelihood. Consider though that the youngest PPC Mac is now pushing about ten years of age! I know that many people like to compare computers to cars, but they may as well be comparing apples and polar bears. Cars are designed to propel themselves along varying road surfaces from point A to point B. As long as a car can stop, go, and maintain at least the minimum speed limit for any given road, it's in no danger of being considered obsolete. Computers must deal with an ever-changing ecosystem. New communication protocols, new file formats, new Web standards, code and tools that leverage newer and more powerful CPU and GPU technologies are all things that computers must cope with on a daily basis. Just as I would never expect my 1983 Apple IIe to log into Facebook over HTTPS, I don't expect my PPC Macs to continue to cope with this constantly changing landscape. Just recently Google updated the way that YouTube delivers its content, which instantly broke support for the third party application, MacTubes, an application that enabled my 400MHz, 1999 PowerMac G4 (Sawtooth) to play videos from YouTube just as well as if not better than any modern machine. I'm thankful for Dropbox and MacTubes alike for supporting my PPC machines as long as they did. That said, there is no reason why PPC users with such an investment in software can't continue to use their machines for the very purpose that they have been using the for all along. How did these users function before Dropbox? What is preventing them from returning to the same productivity model now? Have we all become so dependent on this service that we have completely forgotten how to function without it?
The only people that I truly feel for are those PPC users who paid for Dropbox service and have no other machine that is currently compatible with the service. Unless those users have been refunded at least a portion of those fees, I would agree that they've been cheated. The truth is though that we did receive ample warning. I myself received multiple emails from Dropbox warning of the PPC cutoff date well in advance. I fear that it's entirely possible that some of the complaints of not receiving ample warning are the result of spam filters and users who simply don't check their spam folder occasionally to be safe. I've had many perfectly legitimate email messages land in my spam folder before, which is why I regularly police it to be safe. The main problem with those who didn't realize and did pay for the service anyway is that, unless they can prove that they only have PPC hardware connected to the Dropbox service, they probably won't be able to get any compensation from Dropbox. I can't say much on that subject as my service has always been the free service, so I'll just reiterate that I do feel for those users and leave it there.
Again what did we do before Dropbox? What is preventing us from returning to our previous productivity models? I personally still use Dropbox on my two Intel Macs and my one Windows box. On my PPC Macs, I use file sharing to obtain files from my Dropbox folder on my Intel iMac, log into Dropbox through the Website, or use the good 'ol "sneaker-net" approach to move files from one system to another. I understand that none of these methods is as clean and effortless as the Dropbox client every was, but they're methods that I'm comfortable with. Some users may stick with Dropbox on whatever machines they might have that are still supported and find other ways to work with their old PPC rigs; others may move on to other services and productivity paradigms. In the end, the die has been cast, and Dropbox has made their decision. Stop beating this dead horse and get back to what really matters: being productive on your old PPC Macs!
P.S. Don't bother trying to argue with me since I will be "Unfollowing" this thread shortly as I have already mentioned. These are simply my opinions. If you agree, then I thank you. If you disagree, then by all means continue wasting your time crying over spilt milk instead of finding some other way to continue being productive.
- Erik Y.New member | Level 1
Allright. At the risk of Dropbox shutting this down, take it while you can.
[Link removed by moderator. Please refrain from posting unofficial or modified Dropbox clients on these pages. If you have come here looking for the modified client, remember that what you are trying to download was modified by a third-party and is not supported by Dropbox. Be careful of what you download.]
- Richard SchlettyCollaborator | Level 8
I was also able to implement the Dropbox client v. 3.2.9 hack using Czo's solution on two of my Mac PPC G5s (Mac OS X 10.5.8). The only problem is that the gear does not work in the lower right corner of the Dropbox interface (invoked by clicking on top menu bar icon), making it difficult to stop Dropbox or set selective sync preferences. There is talk of this broken gear issue on one of the threads previously mentioned.
I am syncing video files just like before – as large as 7 GB.
I can't understand why Dropbox has abandoned Mac PPCs. Surely, some well-paid staff programmer at Dropbox could come up with a fully functional Dropbox client for 10.5.8/PPC.
Any bells and whistles that are being added to Dropbox don't seem to be breaking the Windows XP Dropbox client app. So, what gives? And who asked for these new bells and whistles? Not me! I want basic file syncing.
- Nikolas M.New member | Level 1
Another option is, if you happen to have a NAS that supports Dropbox on hand, you can use that as a relatively easy workaround. I have a Synology DS213+ on my network connected to my Dropbox account. I just created aliases to the Dropbox folder on the NAS in place of the old Dropbox folder in my User folder on my 10.4 and 10.5 Macs, and I use those to access Dropbox.
Basically lost menubar access, but otherwise it works as seamlessly as using Dropbox on PPC ever did.
Just an option to consider for the rest of you still using PPC hardware like me. I was pretty enraged over this too, but using the DiskStation has largely solved my issues.
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