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![]() ![]() You can also of course “unsync” files so that they are only available in the cloud. Or, you can right-click and choose “Odrive” and then “Sync.” (A Sync All function requires a paid Odrive Plus account, which costs $4.99 per month.) In the free version, when you navigate into a folder, all of the standalone files in that folders are synced for offline use. ![]() So if there is some part of your OneDrive folder hierarchy you’re going to use regularly, you might want to prime the pump, so to speak, by navigating into those folders up front.Īs you might expect Odrive lets you arbitrarily mark folders and files for offline use. Indeed, the first time you navigate into a folder, things can go pretty slowly, especially if that folder has a lot of files in it. It’s slow than the native sync client, but it works. It uses its own flavor of placeholder files, called CLOUDX files, to indicate files and folders that have not yet synced locally, so you do get that desired Windows 8.1-like view of your OneDrive. Like some other third party utilities, Odrive lets you access your entire OneDrive storage from the Windows shell. But the one I’m highlighting here has been recommended by a number of readers, and after tooling around with it over the past day or so, I’m starting to like how it works. ![]() Actually, there are probably several of them. If only there were a way to browse all of your OneDrive storage from any PC, including the folders and files that are not synced locally.Īs it turns out, there is such a solution. But I’m using over 1 TB of storage, and none of my portable PCs are beefy enough to sync all of my OneDrive. If you only use a small amount of OneDrive storage, this may not matter to you. Instead, you must manually choose which folders to sync, and only those folders will show up in the shell. Which means you can’t just browse through your entire OneDrive cloud storage from the Windows shell. It works great.īut as noted previously, Windows 10 is going back to the old way of doing things and is working off the sync client that Microsoft uses in Windows 7 and 8.0 (and on the Mac). If you’re using Windows 8.1, just stick with the built-in sync client. And while I accept and understand there are some technical issues that apparently only impact Microsoft, I’ve never had any issues with it. To me, the placeholder functionality in the OneDrive sync client in Windows 8.1 is just about perfect. I had stopped looking at third party OneDrive sync utilities with the arrival of Windows 8.1. ![]()
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