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When we talk about the accelerated growth of the Mac in the enterprise, we usually bring up how Apple Business Manager enabled easy zero-touch deployment or the sheer power of Apple Silicon, creating an incredible user experience, but I firmly believe that one of the key trends paved the way for Apple to take over the corporate world was with with Dropbox shoehorning itself into macOS back in the late 2000s.
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About Apple @ Work: Bradley Chambers managed an enterprise IT network from 2009 to 2021. Through his experience deploying and managing firewalls, switches, a mobile device management system, enterprise grade Wi-Fi, 1000s of Macs, and 1000s of iPads, Bradley will highlight ways in which Apple IT managers deploy Apple devices, build networks to support them, train users, stories from the trenches of IT management, and ways Apple could improve its products for IT departments.
Let’s look back to the late 2000s and early 2010s. If you managed a network back then, you know the absolute nightmare of connecting a Mac to a Windows file server. IT departments relied heavily on Active Directory binding and SMB shares. Binding a Mac to an Active Directory domain was brittle at best and really wasn’t scalable. Mapping a network drive was clunky. If a user took their laptop home, forgot to connect to the corporate VPN, and tried to open a file, Finder would completely lock up with the spinning beach ball of death. It was a terrible user experience that gave IT directors all the ammo they needed to ban Macs from the office.
Enter Dropbox
Then came Dropbox. At the end of the 2000s decade, Dropbox completely changed the paradigm for how you’d think about file management and sharing. It was often considered shadow IT because employees installed it themselves and used a 2GB free account. The software shoehorned its way into macOS using custom kernel extensions to add sync icons directly into Finder. While IT hated the lack of control, employees loved the experience. Dropbox proved that people did not want to map a remote drive via a VPN. They just wanted a folder that synced to the cloud and made sharing easy. Steve Jobs famously called it a feature and not a product (He was right and wrong at the same time).
As the industry matured, enterprise tools like Google Drive and Microsoft OneDrive adopted this same model. However, hacking the macOS kernel to provide a syncing folder was neither sustainable nor secure in the long term. Apple recognized this and introduced the File Provider framework. This framework gave cloud storage providers a native, secure, and standardized way to integrate directly into Finder without compromising the operating system.
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Today, these integrations are better than ever. Microsoft recently announced a massive update to the OneDrive macOS app. They completely rewrote the Activity Center in SwiftUI and adopted macOS 26’s Liquid Glass design language. This shows how deeply invested these major cloud providers are in delivering a truly native Mac experience.
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