It’s become more important, and I think will now become less important as the concept of a file changes.
A google docs file isn’t a file in the traditional sense, it just exists on the cloud and we can collaborate at the same time.
Similarly with Figma, that’s not really a file. It just exists and we can all edit it at the same time.
My todo list app used to sync with Dropbox, now it syncs for free without Dropbox.
Even Microsoft office documents on 365 sit in a weird space between ‘kind of a file and kind of not’ - the file is there, but when you are doing live collaborative editing that’s presumably not also updating the file on the disk in real time - there is some other sort of magic going on.
The important thing with the above examples is they can offer better sync because they don’t rely on Dropbox, rather than despite not using Dropbox.
If sync is an application feature, sync tends to be better than if sync isn’t an application feature and it’s left to Dropbox to do the sync.
A google docs file isn’t a file in the traditional sense, it just exists on the cloud and we can collaborate at the same time.
Similarly with Figma, that’s not really a file. It just exists and we can all edit it at the same time.
My todo list app used to sync with Dropbox, now it syncs for free without Dropbox.
Even Microsoft office documents on 365 sit in a weird space between ‘kind of a file and kind of not’ - the file is there, but when you are doing live collaborative editing that’s presumably not also updating the file on the disk in real time - there is some other sort of magic going on.
The important thing with the above examples is they can offer better sync because they don’t rely on Dropbox, rather than despite not using Dropbox.
If sync is an application feature, sync tends to be better than if sync isn’t an application feature and it’s left to Dropbox to do the sync.