
They'll give you up to 3GB of space for free just by enabling auto-upload on your computer, iOS, or Android device. When it comes to photos however, Dropbox has made a bit of a play to make you want to upload all of your photos there.

You can use it for everything from email attachments to document management and revision history. It's available on virtually every platform, every mobile device, and its rich third-party developer community and open APIs offer you the ability to extend its features with useful plugins and services that hook into it. Dropbox: Plenty of Storage and Sharing Options, Not Too Many Editing Features Let's take a look at the two, and determine which one you may want to enable auto-upload on. Like it or not, it's easier these days to snap photos with our phones and have them instantly uploaded to the web for all to see than it is to use an actual camera (even if the photos we'd get from that camera are better.) Dropbox and Google Drive/Google+ both make the process really easy, and offer you a wealth of tools to share, edit, and organize your photos once they've been uploaded. They say the best camera is the one you have with you all the time, and for most of us, that's our cellphone. Let's take a look at which one is best for your shots.

Still, once they're uploaded, both services offer different storage limits, sharing options, and editing tools. It used to be a pain to get photos off of our phones and to the web where we could share them with others, but both Dropbox and Google make it really easy thanks to auto-uploading.
