The company is diversifying their offer now that cloud storage has become a feature, and they’re working on a mobile app to access Paper natively from iOS (right now, it’s web-only). I’m curious to see what Dropbox does here. Or paste a Dropbox-stored file in, and it’ll automatically be available to everyone shared on your Paper document. Or create a to-do list, and assign tasks to other people by them in the document. If you write lines of code, it’ll automatically format and style them as code. You can add images, too, dragging and dropping them around the page or making one full-bleed on the page with a single click. But that’s all obscured, in the hope you’ll turn off your internal font freak and just start typing. There’s some basic formatting in the document-you can write in Markdown, or use sub-heds and bold text. You go to (which right now won’t get you anywhere unless you’re in the beta), and just start typing. It’s an ultra-minimal text editor-every new document offers space for a title and a body, and nothing else to look at. Paper feels like a cross between Google Docs and Medium. Dropbox Paper sounds like a Google Docs and Quip-like product where you can create rich documents and collaborate with others in real-time. Earlier today, Dropbox unveiled Paper, an evolution (and a not so creatively named one) of the Dropbox Notes beta announced in April.
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March 2023
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