It's way more than a simple dropbox client, it's a integrator of those all cloud storages out there. Pretty useful, have been looking for something like that.
One downside is that there is no Linux version planned (right?).
One thing: "Your first 2 accounts are absolutely free!". What 2 accounts exactly means? Is it linking 2 accounts of those services (like Google Drive and Dropbox)?
Another: on the pricing page, "Perpetual updates" is a pro of getting a paid subscription. How limited is the free version in terms of upgrades?
We're actually working on both Linux and Mac clients right now; we just started with Windows.
Right now, you can add two different services for free, adding more requires a subscription - we're still trying to figure out exactly what the right pricing model is.
We don't currently plan on limiting the free version in any way, or not providing updates and bugfixes in future (beyond the two-services limit), our wording could be better here.
I realize the subscription model is likely more attractive from a business standpoint, but as a consumer, I don't see why I would want to pay a monthly or yearly fee for this app - I'd prefer ownership to leasing (which is the norm for applications not requiring server usage).
Is this better? If you have large files it requires a fast internet connection to use them without problems. Accessing files over the internet is completely different to what the standard dropbox software does. It also means you have no backup from say dropbox if anything goes wrong with them.
What does this do? Does it map Dropbox and Google Drive to network drives on Windows (the image indicates so)? Is it a webapp? I'd love to see a more detailed explanation somewhere before signing up.
You're correct - it does map Dropbox, Google Drive and Box to removable drives on Windows, and it also allows you to mix multiple accounts from (say) Dropbox so you can have a work and personal account mounted at the same time. It's not currently a webapp, although we have plans to create one.
Seeing notes as files (plain text or whatever they provide). Not sure about attachments, it could be abstracted in various ways. Then there are Skitch files, that have become part of Evernote.
It actually exposes multiple removable drives (with independent drive letters) which can than be interacted with, just like a USB drive.
On top of that, we add a cache which minimizes interactions with the various provider APIs so it feels local, even though we're actively making calls over the internet in the background.
One downside is that there is no Linux version planned (right?).
One thing: "Your first 2 accounts are absolutely free!". What 2 accounts exactly means? Is it linking 2 accounts of those services (like Google Drive and Dropbox)?
Another: on the pricing page, "Perpetual updates" is a pro of getting a paid subscription. How limited is the free version in terms of upgrades?