This is why I could never buy into the comment Steve Jobs supposedly made that Dropbox is just a feature.
I'm still not convinced about the Dropbox developer experience though. I would think web integration is key to them winning. Similar to the way FB wants Like buttons everywhere, Dropbox wants Dropbox This everywhere. And yet, there's no way to pass a URL and say "store that". Dev has to pull the URL and copy it across, every time, and Dropbox has no idea it's the same URL.
A bit specific, but an example where Dropbox needs to invest its new capital into making life easier for developers, especially if similar products from say Google or Amazon emerge...which would presumably be cross-platform, unlike Apple's offering.
I'm still not convinced about the Dropbox developer experience though. I would think web integration is key to them winning. Similar to the way FB wants Like buttons everywhere, Dropbox wants Dropbox This everywhere. And yet, there's no way to pass a URL and say "store that". Dev has to pull the URL and copy it across, every time, and Dropbox has no idea it's the same URL.
A bit specific, but an example where Dropbox needs to invest its new capital into making life easier for developers, especially if similar products from say Google or Amazon emerge...which would presumably be cross-platform, unlike Apple's offering.