Dropbox Dash Is Building The Universal Search Engine For Work With McLaren F1

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When Dropbox first launched in 2007, it promised a simple way to sync and share files across devices. For a while, it worked. User numbers climbed, venture capital flowed, and Dropbox became one of Silicon Valley’s early success stories. But after the initial wave of growth, CEO Drew Houston found himself fighting on several fronts, against Apple’s iCloud, Google Drive, Microsoft OneDrive, and a shifting perception that Dropbox was simply another storage company. Now, nearly two decades in, Houston is trying to reshape the company’s role in a workplace that looks nothing like it did when Dropbox started. “We’re shifting from syncing files to being the intelligence layer for your working life,” Houston said in an interview at the McLaren Technology Centre in Woking, UK.
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Anshika Mathews
Anshika is the Senior Content Strategist for AIM Research. She holds a keen interest in technology and related policy-making and its impact on society. She can be reached at anshika.mathews@aimresearch.co
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