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wonderbore | 3 years ago

Yes and you can use rsync instead of Dropbox ($10B)

People are willing to pay for convenience. Your mutt isn’t going to automatically find all large attachment, downsize them or handle inline images, but you didn’t read the article so you wouldn’t know that.

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umanwizard|3 years ago

What an unnecessarily combative response. The person never claimed that this service has no value; that’s a strawman you constructed. They’re just helpfully pointing out another (free!) way of accomplishing the same thing for those who might want it.

notpushkin|3 years ago

I assume ($10B) is the current Dropbox, Inc. valuation. Is it somehow relevant here?

abiloe|3 years ago

Yes, that a company with $10B valuation must necessarily have somehow found a market.

hoseja|3 years ago

It's a reference to an infamous HN comment about how DropBox is trivially replaceable by an invocation of rsync and thus has no market value.

diffeomorphism|3 years ago

Doesn't this show the complete opposite of what you intended?

Removing attachments is a standard feature of just about any email client, even extremely barebones/cli ones. That was the point. Yet, Gmail is lacks this convenience. Are you seriously arguing that none wants Gmail?

throwaway0x7E6|3 years ago

and IT professionals don't use Dropbox for non-trivial use cases. but you wouldn't know that