Dropbox built its reputation on one thing: a folder that simply stayed in sync. Years before cloud storage was a commodity, it solved file syncing so reliably that 'just put it in Dropbox' became office shorthand, and that engineering pedigree still shows. Its block-level sync uploads only the changed parts of a file, which makes saving revisions to large documents and design files noticeably faster than rivals that re-upload everything.
The weakness is the deal on offer. A free account starts at 2 GB, a fraction of what Google, Microsoft, or Apple hand out, and the app steers persistently toward Plus plans that only pay off for heavy users. There is also history to weigh: credentials stolen from Dropbox in 2012 surfaced publicly in 2016, affecting around 68 million accounts. The company handled disclosure responsibly, but it remains a standing argument for two-factor authentication here.
Keeping work files identical across machines
The core use case since day one: a folder on your laptop, desktop, and phone that never disagrees with itself. Conflicts produce clearly labelled duplicate copies rather than silent overwrites, which long-time users consider the product's defining virtue.
Photo and document backup from your phone
Camera uploads back up photos automatically over Wi-Fi, and the document scanner saves multi-page PDFs. The free 2 GB fills fast this way, which is of course part of the design.
Sharing large files with clients
Links to files of any size can be sent to people without Dropbox accounts, with password protection and expiry available on paid plans. Transfer, the send-once feature, handles deliveries you do not want living in your synced folders.
Block-level sync
When you change a large file, Dropbox uploads only the altered blocks rather than the whole thing. For big design files, archives, and long documents saved repeatedly, this makes syncing dramatically faster than services that re-transfer entire files.
Version history and file recovery
Deleted files and previous versions can be restored for 30 days on free and Plus accounts, and 180 days on higher tiers. This capability has rescued enough theses and client projects to justify the app by itself.
Selective and offline access
On Android, files stream from the cloud by default; marking items offline stores them locally. This keeps the app light on phone storage while letting you pin the folders you genuinely need on the move.
Camera uploads and scanning
Automatic camera uploads remain one of the simplest phone-photo backup systems available, and the built-in scanner produces clean multi-page PDFs. Neither is remarkable individually; their reliability over years of use is the point, in keeping with the product's character.