Dropbox does not currently have a feature to sort files via chronological order.
We can see all of your files if you go to the following link: http://www.dropbox.com/events
Dropbox does not currently have a feature to sort files via chronological order.
We can see all of your files if you go to the following link: http://www.dropbox.com/events
http://fredericiana.com/2012/12/09/custom-domain-with-dropbox/
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There’s another option that doesn’t require any changes to your server. However, you’ll need access to your provider’s DNS settings.
If you do have such access, you can create a DNS CNAME record. A CNAME record is essentially a domain alias, forwarding one domain name to another.
It’s pretty simple:
i.example.com) and point it to dl.dropbox.com.Once the changes have been picked up by the DNS system, you’re done! Your screenshots will be available under a URL like: http://i.example.com/u/XYZ/Screenshots/abcd.png.
While certainly elegant, one (big) caveat of this solution is that the resulting URLs still contain the portion /u/XYZ/Screenshots. Because the CNAME record works purely on a domain level, there is no way for us to hide this portion of the URLs with this method.
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Things…You Could Do with Dropbox
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/15-things-didnt-know-dropbox/ interesting bits about overlay photoshoot.io domain & 200Gb/day bandwidth limit
Instead of re-launching Finder, an alternative in my case is to manually create a new folder inside the dropbox folder that doesn’t show the new files and then to immediately delete the new (still empty) folder. Upon deletion, the list of files is updated. Very annoying.
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