![]() ![]() That being the case, the need for an intuitive, efficient photo storage system has become that much more critical.Īn online photo organizer helps you manage your digital image files and provide quick access to any photo when you need it. We take, save, and share more digital photos every day since it is so easy. Working with the Cloud is now common with Photoshop and Lightroom, with dedicated new apps, different from the original local storing and computing solutions.Photography has rapidly evolved because of smartphones. So, I think that Adobe must be able to solve the problem with its own Cloud before doing so with Dropbox. That was very limited and the organizer was not involved. PSE2021 has introduced a 'preview' feature for some users to save and retrieve files on Adobe's own Cloud. Using Dropbox just like any external drive while sharing also the catalog seems a dream today. If you can point to links about cooperation from Dropbox and other Adobe apps, that could help. I was hopeful as I came across an artical that talked about Adobe and Dropbox integration that this might be an option.īy integration from syncing does work but does not allow direct referencing of files in the Cloud and is not a solution to too small SSDs. Then I could process the files locally and move them to dropbox for storage and sharing. However, I was hoping that in the world of streaming and online storage services that there would be a better more elegant option to link directly to my online dropbox account. Storing photos on an external drive was one of the approaches I was considering. I am sure we'll get other advice and suggestions in this discussion! If you choose an external USB3 SSD drive to store the images and the scratch disk, that will be a good alternative solution. That's what is the most important for fast workflow and editing. If you want to make the most of a SSD with Elements, use it to define your primary scratch disk with enough space (100 to 200 GB ideally). You can share your images, not your catalogs on Dropbox. Don't store working catalogs on Dropbox, only safety copies of the folders. Your catalog can manage both the Dropbox files and the files on the external drive. You can use your Dropbox system folder to store only recent and best photos to share externally. ![]() If possible a USB3 drive, small, reliable and affordable. If you have a small single drive, store your images AND your catalogs on an external drive. ![]() You don't spare any space on your local drive. So, currently, if you use Dropbox to store (and share) your photo files, you manage a copy of all the files in the Cloud in your local computer and DropBox does the automatic syncing. Maybe there is a way to manage the location of the files in the Cloud just like with a NAS that's probably what happened in the other discussion today. That also works with files on a NAS, but there I can't help you. The organizer can only link to files on your computer (any internal or external drive). Will organizer be able to link/list these file?īy unless someone proves me wrong (which would be good for you.) I am wondering if I store my photos in dropbox online. I need a new machine, which is going to be Win 11 with a smaller HDD.
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