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Dropbox update brings time-based comments with mentions for video and audio files

Dropbox is out with a new feature today that will surely be welcomed by teams who regularly work with video and audio content. The popular file sharing company is rolling out the ability to add time-based comments and @mentions to audio and video files for streamlining collaboration.

Dropbox detailed the update in a press release today:

Now when you share a video or audio file, recipients can place a comment at a specific place on the file’s timeline. So instead of commenting“There’s a popping noise on the soundtrack about a minute in,” reviewers can place a comment at the 0:51 mark that says,“Remove popping noise.”

The new functionality should help make collaboration with large video and audio files a smoother experience.

Time-based comments for Video and Audio highlights:

  • Targeted feedback. Add time stamps to your comments so others can jump to the exact second you’re referring to. 
  • Enhanced playback. Adjust speed and scrub through 1080p video previews with thumbnails and audio previews with waveforms.
  • Broad format support. Preview and comment on over 30 video and audio file types, including QuickTime, MPEG-4, MXF, MP3, and WAV.
  • Multi-gigabyte file sharing. Send files big and small—no need to compress files to fit in under an email attachment size limit—for feedback from your team and clients.
  • Fast approvals. @mention team members, clients, and vendors to notify them of your comments—and keep projects moving.

The new feature is available now via the web as well as the iOS Dropbox app. Another great aspect is the functionality is supported on all Dropbox account types. The feature will be coming to the Android app in a future update.

Anyone with a Dropbox account can add time-based comments to files shared by Dropbox Professional, Business Advanced, Enterprise, and Education users.

Last fall Dropbox rolled out a major update with new integration partnerships with Adobe, Vimeo, DocuSign, and more.


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Avatar for Michael Potuck Michael Potuck

Michael is an editor for 9to5Mac. Since joining in 2016 he has written more than 3,000 articles including breaking news, reviews, and detailed comparisons and tutorials.