If you can’t get offline Docs to work with Drive, try restarting your browser. The good news, however, is that if your computer is set-up to access Docs offline using Google Chrome, you can open these files in just one click via the Drive folder on your desktop.
Legacy drive app google drive for mac/pc full#
Instead, you get a folder full of icons that are links to open the documents in your browser. Google Drive doesn’t download copies of your files that are saved online in Google’s Docs formats. Not a big deal, but it’s a little annoying that Drive wipes out Docs and then rearranges some of your stuff. After a little more searching I finally found it under “All items.” If you’re missing documents after switching to Drive, click on the “More” dropdown menu to get to the “All items” menu to see whether it’s there. Usually this is the first document I see when I log in to my account, and when I went to the “Shared with me” section it wasn’t there either. Then when I opened up Drive, I was shocked to see that a collaborative document PCWorld uses was missing from my docs list. Not a huge deal, but I wasn’t expecting it. Once you add Drive to your Google Account, Docs automatically disappears and is replaced by Drive instead. Here’s a look at some of the best and worst highlights of Google Drive. Overall, Drive is a pretty good service and offers more free storage than the 2GB you get from Dropbox, but less than the free 7GB Microsoft offers with SkyDrive. Then you just drag-and-drop files into the new folder and the contents automatically sync to the cloud as well as any other computers with Drive installed. Similar to Dropbox, Google Drive installs a folder on your Mac or Windows PC desktop (a Google representative told PCWorld a Linux version is in the works, too). Google officially launched Drive on Tuesday featuring 5GB free online storage and the ability to buy more storage such as 25GB for $2.50 per month ($30 per year) up to a maximum 16TB for $800 per month.
Legacy drive app google drive for mac/pc android#
And unless you’re an Android user, the mobile experience for Drive is not great.
But if you just want to get some work done using a reliable file storage and sync service, Drive may not be ready for you just yet. Google’s long-awaited Dropbox competitor, Drive, is finally here and includes impressive search capabilities and good integration with other Google services including Docs and Google+.