Huh. I had no idea that this feature was even available. I imagine that keeping an unlimited amount of undo data would take up a heck of a lot of space that wasn't actually needed, so it makes a lot of sense that they're switching it to premium accounts only.
To me, even 30 days seems generous. I suspect they have statistics on how often people undo changes, and from how far back. It'd be interesting to see the data that motivated the "30 day" rule, if it exists.
If the "deleted" files didn't count towards your total usage percentage, someone was eventually going to game the system and use the "deleted" area for storage and undelete things as they needed them. The 2G of total space becomes swap for the deleted file storage area ;)
Yeah, that's not the same message they sent to all people. Mine gave me a choice but if I chose the Unlimited, the message clearly stated I would need to upgrade.
Oh well, either way, I don't mind. I don't require the unlimited history at this point right now, anyways.
Argh. I understand why they're doing this, but unlimited undo was at least half the reason I picked Dropbox in the first place:
1. Put file that I probably don't need in Dropbox
2. Delete the file after the sync
3. Never worry that I just deleted a file I might actually need
Of course, I could upgrade my account to keep unlimited undo, but I don't need the extra space, and their price is pretty steep just to get this one feature. I'm probably better off versioning my Dropbox directory and sticking it on an external drive. Except I can't get at deleted files that are more than 30 days old that I previously put in Dropbox for the very purpose of not having to worry about them. Man, this sucks. I guess I have some extra work to do before August 1.
I find this rather upsetting. I picked the unlimited option; but think that this removes the pressure on them to make a nice interface to all the deleted files.
To me, even 30 days seems generous. I suspect they have statistics on how often people undo changes, and from how far back. It'd be interesting to see the data that motivated the "30 day" rule, if it exists.