
Views.fm allows you to create either public or secure, privately-shared folders that are automatically organized in an easily scan-able thumbnail view. The sharing options are limited, and the utility’s photo display doesn’t really have a great interface, either.Įnter: Views.fm, a viewer that enables quick and elegant presentation of your Dropbox content. (Admittedly, like every other site out there.) Sharing an entire Dropbox folder, for example, remains difficult unless it’s your Public folder.

Though Dropbox is fast becoming a Silicon Valley darling and passed the 4-million-user mark at the end of January 2010, parts of the Dropbox sharing experience are lacking. Part of what makes Dropbox so great is its simplicity - you download the utility, create an account, and you can easily share all of your electronic files in a virtual cloud folder, collaborate with friends and colleagues, and sync between devices and hard drives. At the end of the post, I mentioned the popular cloud storage, sync, and file-sharing startup, Dropbox, as a service I use frequently. In a recent post, I talked about some of the problems that remain in a specific (and familiar) part of the content-sharing sphere: file-sharing. After all, sharing is caring, amirite friends? The rise of the social graph has only brought more attention to the ways we share and with whom we share.

Whether it be photos, videos, music, links, code, we share the content we produce and consume all the time.
