I've installed Dropbox on my new laptop (Windows 10) with a 235GB hard drive and I've chosen online-only at the installation. Nonetheless, Dropbox has filled my hard drive and made my laptop completely unusable. I've checked all my folders for online-only, and there was one which was not set to online-only, the rest were. I've tried several times to set the last folder to online-only but I didn't succeed, since it still kept showing the option of online-only. I have no idea why that one folder was not set to online-only, and also that one folder by itself was not big enough to fill my hard drive. I couldn't see any solution to this puzzle, but since I desperately needed a solution, as I couldn't download even one file to my laptop due to a completely full hard drive, I set all my Dropbox folders in selective sync to not show on the laptop. That didn't make any difference to my hard drive either, it's still completely full. In fact, very annoyingly, I kept getting notifications from Dropbox asking me to free up some space, since it cannot sync files. Of course there was nothing that I could free up (it's a brand new laptop, so I don't even have temp files), as the space was taken up by Dropbox...

As my next desperate act, I uninstalled Dropbox from my laptop, and now I have the following weird situation. In file view, I see only one file in Dropbox, which was somehow outside of all the folders, so it is showing there, unlike all the folders which I deselected in selective sync. This is a 300KB file. However, when I look at my Dropbox folder in storage, it shows that Dropbox is occupying 73GB! (apparently the rest of the 235GB is taken up by system files, and 102GB is needed for system restore). This is a completely bizarre situation. Now you will probably tell me to go ahead and delete the Dropbox folder on my laptop, and this may (or may not) free up my 73GB hard disk space. However, at this point I am really paranoid about anything related to Dropbox, since so far nothing has worked the way it is supposed to, and it's driving me crazy that everything I find on the internet says that smart sync (online-only) and selective sync should work - well, they didn't work for me, quite the opposite, Dropbox has completely destroyed my laptop (so far)...


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So, even though I have uninstalled Dropbox, I don't trust anything about Dropbox, and I am nervous about deleting the Dropbox folder on my laptop, as I don't want to lose my files in Dropbox. I cannot even do a partial delete to test the situation, as I don't see any folders under Dropbox (due the deselecting all folders in selective sync). I've tried to delete the one remaining file under Dropbox on my laptop to test whether that would change anything in my Dropbox online, but I received an error message. The error message says that "an unexpected error is keeping you from deleting the file." At this point this is not so unexpected... everything is going wrong, and this whole situation is very confusing. Can anyone tell me what's going on? Can anyone hep me out and tell me what to do? And most importantly, can anyone reassure me that whatever happens on this laptop, it won't make me lose my files from Dropbox? I would really appreciate it.

I just wanted to let you know that I managed to resolve the problem, at last. I did get the external drive first and saved everything (which took several days), and then I double-checked that the Dropbox app was uninstalled and made sure that the laptop was disconnected from my Dropbox online. Then I deleted the Dropbox folder on the laptop, and afterwards I started the Dropbox app installation again.

In the meantime I'd found an old thread somewhere, where actually several people had similar issues to mine, not being able to stop Dropbox from filling up their hard drives, quite inexplicably. It's a very small minority of Dropbox users who are affected by this, and it was suggested there that this may happen when a third party overrides the default Dropbox installation, such as an antivirus program, firewall, or some organization. The latter applies to me, as I don't have full admin rights on my computer which is owned by my university. Of course my university claims that this has nothing to do with how Dropbox acted on my laptop, but I'm convinced that all my troubles are actually due to the fact they they've managed to create some settings on my laptop (unintentionally) which resulted in overriding the default settings and installation procedure for the Dropbox app.

So, the procedure that worked for me under these circumstances was the following: after installing the Dropbox app, I deselected all my folders on my laptop in selective sync first and let that sync (or, actually, not sync...) for about a day. Then I made sure that the "Save hard drive space automatically" was on in my Dropbox Preferences, and subsequently selected my folders to make them visible again in selective sync, ensuring that all of them were set to online only. This sequence did the trick. I believe that the key step that I was missing before was to immediately de-select all the Dropbox folders in selective sync after installing the app, which actually stopped Dropbox from syncing all the files to the hard drive, unlike simply selecting the online-only option from the beginnig which did not make any difference and never worked. Afterwards I was able to re-introduce these folders in the online-only mode, which was not possible before.

I would remove the laptop from the docking station and connect one monitor at a time directly to the laptop, to see if the temps go down. If the temps go down, then put the laptop back into the docking station and connect one monitor at a time, to see if the temps go back up.

In this case, it is possible (but not certain) that using the DisplayPort for your video could solve the problem. But it is more likely that you have a lot of dust inside of the laptop. Or, perhaps some component is damaged, causing the overheating problem.

You could blow compressed air into the air vent on the side of the computer (where the hot air comes out), to dislodge the dust. This will spread dust around inside of the laptop, which is not good. But it will allow air to flow and cool down the internal parts, including the CPU.

But a better way to eliminate the dust is to take the laptop apart and blow it completely out. And while the laptop is apart, reseat the heatsink onto the CPU with high-grade thermal compound (see my post above).

I would suggest getting a laptop stand, one which has a fan in it, so that it will continually ventilate the bottom of your laptop. It will also keep some air space below the laptop. At minimum, you should keep the laptop on a hard, flat surface, so that it can release heat at the bottom. NEVER put it on a blanket or other soft surface, because that will cause it to hold heat in.

If using it on your bed or lap, get a cheap whiteboard ( take off the magnetic backing or pads ) even on the table. The one I have has a masonite back and a little lip all the way round and it is easy to put the laptop down any time and on anything and never worry about it being on a cushion, just grab both at once and it is always protected. It has large radius rounded corners and a little border all the way round which deflects the exhaust air up so my leg never gets affected. It fits in with the laptop in the bag and helps protect it against bumps and bangs. We have a LOT of cats and I have opened all the access panels in my laptop and I have never had any issues with dust or cat hair.

There is the added advantage that you can use a dry erase pen to scribble notes down by tilting the front edge of the notebook up. This is good because the note is still available after you shut down the laptop or the power fails.

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When I sent it back, they insisted that the lack of VGA output is merely a software/drivers issue (i.e. the port needs to be turned on from Windows), and if I install a working laptop screen, I would see video immediately.

I find that hard to believe, and I feel that it is a hardware/gpu issue, because with every other laptop I have tried, the VGA port turns on immediately once the computer is turned on and displays the BIOS messages (press Fx for setup, etc.) I just need to know that this is the case before I take it up further with them.

I am not sure if my graphics card (nvidia 960m) is it working or not on my laptop. It should be running, considering that the drivers are installed and on the app (NVIDIA X Server Settings) I selected "performance mode". But then again, it is not what the info on the terminal it is saying. Any suggestions will be appreciated. Thanks.

I hope that this was helpful! Now you can work, watch a movie or do whatever you want while traveling! (We even set up our laptop on the arm rests between the middle of the captain seats and our kids watched a Netflix movie. It worked out perfectly!)

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