Dropbox stories
Leading software dev company Buildkite announced new board members including Dr. Michelle Deaker, founding partner of OneVentures.
Dr. Craig Martell, AI and machine learning expert, joins data security firm Cohesity as CTO, tasked with impacting the company's tech vision and AI-driven future roadmap.
Dennis Woodside takes the reins as CEO of Freshworks, succeeding company founder Girish Mathrubootham who becomes Executive Chairman, guiding the firm to its next chapter of global growth.
Dropbox boosts productivity and security in Australia and New Zealand with new features including end-to-end encryption, Microsoft Teams integration and AI-powered search tool, Dropbox Dash.
Dropbox responds to challenges of remote working with security enhancements, upgrades to Dropbox Replay, and new integrations with Microsoft tools.
NVIDIA unveils an extensive array of enterprise-grade generative AI microservices, allowing businesses to develop and distribute custom applications while retaining full intellectual property ownership.
Despite the widespread adoption of cloud storage solutions, the transition of printing services to the cloud has lagged behind due to technology availability, data security concerns and large file sizes.
VIPRE's annual email threat landscape study reveals a 276% rise in malware, with financial services the most targeted sector.
NVIDIA introduces NeMo Retriever, a state-of-the-art AI microservice enhancing AI application accuracy.
Neo4j unveils functionality to boost performance of cloud databases, enabling up to 100x faster analytical queries.
A new attack using Dropbox for phishing has been discovered, with 5,440 attacks observed in the first two weeks of September.
While remote work has given us increased flexibility and freedom, it has also blurred the lines between our work and home lives.
The updates are designed to power modern work and allow users to complete more workflows directly from the platform. .
Dropbox has agreed to buy document management firm DocSend for $165m as it looks to capitalise on remote working opportunities.
Dropbox is investing in what it calls a 'Virtual First' working policy, which puts remote work front and centre of the company's workforce culture.
Customers are now able to electronically sign and share documents from Dropbox, and store them within Australia to ensure data residency.
Dropbox has unveiled new tools and features to enhance remote work setups and productivity, including Dropbox Passwords and computer backup.
The file-sharing and management company is aiming to embed its place in the IT channel both regionally and globally.
Businesses that are already using Dropbox can integrate HelloSign into their workflows in Office 365, Salesforce, G-Suite and others.
Marketing for early-stage startups with tight budgets is undoubtedly challenging, but, approached strategically, it's far from insurmountable.