There will be no option to enter your Dropbox credentials yet because first you’d need to authorize and link Cyberduck with Dropbox. Then, from the drop-down, select Dropbox as the default protocol. You can directly access your Dropbox files using Cyberduck. You can also download these remote directories and files locally by right-clicking on them and choosing Download. To update the file and directory listing, select File > Synchronize. To upload an existing file or directory to the server, choose File > Upload. To make a new file or directory, click on File > New Folder or New File. Once the authentication is successful, you can then access and browse remote directories and files. There will be a display window that will require FTP server credentials. If you’ve used FileZilla, then accessing remote files by FTP using Cyberduck would be familiar. ( OneDrive is already integrated with Windows so there is no need to access it using Cyberduck when using Windows). Let’s take a look at how to use it to connect to FTP servers, Dropbox, Google Drive, and Amazon S3 services. Using it is free but for unregistered versions, before exiting it a notification about contributing for supporting the development will be displayed.
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