WTF, Dropbox?

I’ve been using Dropbox for years, from before I had multiple devices to sync or even fully understood how to use it efficiently. I don’t remember what got me started—collaborating with an editor? Sharing my son’s homework? Who knows, and it doesn’t matter. I ended up with it installed on two MacBooks (one at my house and one at my girlfriend’s), an iPad, and an iPhone.

At the same time, a key part of my workflow has long been custom icons to help distinguish different projects. I’m a freelance writer and might be working with 4 or 5 clients at the same time, and having each client’s work folder represented by their logo makes finding what I want to work on a lot more efficient.

Up until a few weeks ago, these two things worked together seamlessly: I could use custom icons for the projects stored in Dropbox, and while the icons wouldn’t sync with the folders, they were persistent on the machine I created them on. But then one day, I saw that all my work folders just had generic folder icons.

It took me a few days to figure out it was just folders in Dropbox that had turned generic—that it wasn’t some systemwide MacOS glitch. Once I pinpointed the problem, I went looking for solutions on the Dropbox support forum. Unsurprisingly, I found a fairly recent thread discussing my issue. But even though the thread was marked “solved,” the alleged solution didn’t work (“upgrade”), and new participants like me were still asking for answers.

What was particularly aggravating was that Dropbox started out denying that anything had changed. A support representative kept popping into the discussion to assure us that they’d be in touch via email, but everyone they contacted got some variation of the answer I did: “this is normal behavior from the Dropbox application” and “there is no process for the Mac OS to allow customized icons to remain upon syncing” (even though that had always worked before). Others were told they should get in touch with Apple to resolve the issue. The attitude seemed to be that custom icons were a special feature we were requesting, not just the restoration of a function that had always been there.

The baffling part for me was and is: doesn’t anybody at Dropbox use custom folder icons? Don’t any of the engineers or managers keep track of their projects that way? Didn’t this change bust a lot of internal workflows to the point that somebody thought “maybe this isn’t a good idea”?

Dissatisfaction grows Continue reading “WTF, Dropbox?”