
The drawing in 2D format acquired the same color – without lightening or darkening. The designers have made it more schematic and flat. The word “Dropbox” is now the same blue as the icon, and it has a different shape. The changes made were related to style and color.

On the right was the name of the company that provided this service. It was drawn as realistic as possible due to the shaded and lightened areas. On the left was an icon in the form of an open square box. The direct analogy stuck because it accurately reflected the service and did not clutter the logo with accompanying details. Therefore, it depicts an ordinary cardboard box, which manufacturers use to store and deliver goods. The debut logo of the cloud service was immediately associated with its name. has already been officially renamed Dropbox, Inc. But Dropbox’s official opening date is 2008, when the unusual service kicked off right at TechCrunch Disrupt, an annual technology conference. As a result, in the spring of 2007, the student launched Evenflow, Inc. Having started doing a project for himself, he immediately realized that his startup would be useful to many users who face similar problems. Moreover, he did not like the services that existed since they suffered from Internet delay, difficulties in transferring large files, and simply from errors. Therefore, the student decided to do something to help him avoid such situations. Drew Houston conceived it after again forgetting his flash drive at home and did not have access to the completed task. Like any big project, Dropbox started with a trivial personal problem solution. Dropbox made it to the list of the most valuable startups in the world. This is my primary work computer & it's getting more & more out of sync with my Windows 7 laptops on which Dropbox is still working fine.This is an American company and its eponymous file hosting service. This is the same behavior as before I did the Uninstall three weeks ago I guess I've been putting off the Advanced Reinstall because I was afraid this would happen. After a pause, the Dropbox icon briefly appeared in white in the tray but disappeared after a few seconds.

I tried double-clicking the Dropbox icon in the Start box. It got far enough that my Dropbox folder in File Explorer (C:\Users\Roy\Dropbox) changed back from a generic folder icon to the familiar blue Dropbox icon, and Dropbox reappeared in my list of apps in the Start box. The install ran for about three more minutes before apparently stopping. It took about 3 minutes to download the desktop app. Hannah (or whoever can help me): I uninstalled, rebooted, deleted the only Dropbox folder I found (in PROGRAMFILES(X86)), and downloaded and double-clicked Dropboxinstaller.exe.
