ok, I grok the demographic distinction [vs DropBox]..  I think it is
handy for media projects, such as graphic artist sharing assets with a
developer.


Im actually wondering if having a tree view / folder hierarchy to
organise the uploaded files would give you that ramp up into managing
more of their workflow?

eg. Projects > ProjectX > Backgrounds > hi_res >
splash_v1.01_2400x1800.png

[ You'd want to implement with a jQuery tree plugin, so its
expandable ]


In practice, I've seen people use Google Docs for a similar purpose,
where they have many project assets. You might talk to graphic
designers and figure out a value add, or it just looks more like a
mac, so they use your offering.

Opening a .tgz or .zip into its folder might be another value add,
depends what your users are calling out for.

its all good,


[email protected]



On Oct 18, 11:48 am, Dan Washusen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Gord, you're right about it being a competitive market (what isn't?) but I'd 
> probably say that the likes of yousendit and wetransfer are more along our 
> lines.  I love and use dropbox on the daily basis but we're focusing on file 
> delivery rather than cloud-sync.  We see our market as being digital media 
> types (photographers, video post prod, graphic designers, etc) who are 
> relatively tech savvy but deal with non-tech savvy types (so FTP is a pain 
> for all involved)...  
>
> --  
> Dan Washusen
> Make big files fly
> visit digitalpigeon.com (http://digitalpigeon.com)

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