
I did have a Google Business account with unlimited space. My wife lost hers after a summer program stint. I've lost one (and all its data) this way because the admin thought I was a student not coming back. I have an unlimited space from G Suite for Education.Yeah those are fun, as long as it's a 4 year university or a college that doesn't delete your account or deactivate it the moment you're done. Now that all I use is a MBP, not much use for it. Great way to get files from one computer to another. What I love most about Dropbox is the LAN syncing. Sometimes I have to delete my files I uploaded so they can upload a file.

When you share a folder with someone else and drop a large file in it, not only does it use up your available space but also the account of the person you shared it with. Dropbox Business is priced at $15 per month per user with a minimum of three users, but pricing drops to $12.50 per user when billed yearly.ĭropbox is a lot more trouble than what it's worth.
Free storage space remains limited to 2GB, while Plus subscribers will continue to have 1TB of storage space.ĭropbox Professional is priced at $19.99 per month or $16.58 when paying yearly. Starting today, Dropbox Professional accounts get 2TB of storage space, while Business Standard teams have access to 3TB of shared storage space.Īccording to Dropbox, its new storage limits give customers more freedom to free up phone and hard drive space, share large files, and work with Dropbox's Smart Syncing features.Īll new Professional and Business Standard accounts include the upgraded storage today, while storage for existing accounts will be upgraded in the coming weeks.ĭropbox is not increasing storage space available for free tiers or its Plus accounts. Dropbox today announced that it is increasing the amount of storage space available to many of its paid subscribers for no additional charge.
