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Forum Discussion
jwhitley
2 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Set all folders to "make available offline" on macOS
In the new macOS FileProvider API version of Dropbox, is it possible to recursively set all folders to "make available offline"? If so, does this setting persist for newly added sub-folders? I've r...
- 2 years ago
Yes, marking a folder as available offline will make all subfolders available offline as well, in perpetuity.
Jay
2 years agoDropbox Staff
Hi jwhitley, thanks for messaging the Community.
By default, on the new version of the Dropbox desktop application for Mac OS, newly added files will be online-only.
You can mark folders as available offline when right clicking them for files within those folders to also be downloaded offline.
If you have any further queries, feel free to message back.
- RicBret2 years agoHelpful | Level 6
>> By default, on the new version of the Dropbox desktop application for Mac OS, newly added files will be online-only.
This was an **bleep** move. You reversed my universal setting without asking, without notification. And now it's MY job to fix your mess.
I will be reconsidering continuing my subscription to Dropbox.
- lls37 months agoNew member | Level 2
Same sentiment. I am furious with thousands of photos that i have to "move" so I can work with them. Dropbox was THE reason I didn't bother with anyone else's cloud - your system was seamless and flawless and I could go from device to device and know my files were accessible. I absolutely deplore what you've done and regret the money I've spent for the "professional" version.
- beatbox453212 years agoNew member | Level 2
Can someone from DB please let us know why this was changed?? I have used DB for over a decade for all our business files precisely because I could have local files that were also synced but fully available whether I was online or not. But now the app silently removed this option with no notice. I accidentally discovered it.
Is this option going to be added back? After being a long-term customer this upgrade unfortunately is going to lead me to look for other options.
- adelanteconjuicio2 years agoExplorer | Level 4
I agree. I am very disappointed in this DB move. Mac + DB was my dream set-up and DB managed to shatter it with a) moving the files to a different folder (which changes all the folder addresses I use in other files) and b) changing to online-only as default. (I am not affected by the external drive issue). Poor move, even more poorly communicated. Very disappointed.
- beatbox453212 years agoNew member | Level 2
FYI DB support told me if you go to the Dropbox folder and set it to offline using right click that will restore the old behavior because it applies to all subfolders.I *think* it is working for me but will have to verify over time.
Still I'm very disappointing in the lack of clarity on this and this option could easily have been kept as it was before instead of buried. Like you it was my dream solution for many years but unfortunately I may have to look for alternatives in the future.
- jwhitley2 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Thanks for the reply. To clarify/reiterate my question: Does marking a folder as "offline" make that folder's subfolders also available offline? This, specifically, is what I've gathered isn't supported. It's also completely nonsensical, which is why I'm trying to clarify the behavior here. Dropbox's documentation is silent on this point, as far as I can determine.
My expected/desired behavior is this: if I mark a top-level Dropbox folder (call it "Stuff") as available offline, all files and folders underneath that will be made available offline in perpetuity. If I have to constantly hunt down new files and/or subfolders of "Stuff" and also mark those "offline" ... that's a deal breaker, as I explained above.
- Jay2 years agoDropbox Staff
Yes, marking a folder as available offline will make all subfolders available offline as well, in perpetuity.
- RicBret2 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Dropbox, make absolutely no mistake. Your "feature" represents a data-loss situation even if you don't lose one file. You've lost settings on files that may have been thoughtfully made on a case-by-case basis, and you wiped that out without notice, without annotation, without any care for the preferences of your users.
This was a thoughtless and lazy example of sub-par programming and design. Your team should be ashamed of themselves and the permanent damage they have done to Dropbox's reputation. You are no longer trustworthy, you are no longer "beloved."
I have terabytes of unused space on my OneDrive storage that I'll be moving my mission critical files to. I may not resubscribe to Dropbox when my current term runs out. This is a shame, I've been a user since you first launched, and much of my default storage was gifted to me because of my recommendations that brought you new users. I'm not a hater here, I'm a victim of your poor decisions.
YOU OWE US AN EXPLAINATION AS TO WHY YOU COULD NOT HANDLE THIS UPGRADE IN A PROFESSIONAL MANNER.
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