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Switching from Dropbox to Feedtracks - What You Need to Know
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Switching from Dropbox to Feedtracks - What You Need to Know

Complete migration guide for switching from Dropbox to Feedtracks. Learn the key differences, what to expect during migration, and how to transition your audio workflow smoothly.

Feedtracks Team
16 min read

You’ve been using Dropbox for years. It syncs reliably, your collaborators know how it works, and you’ve built your entire backup workflow around it. But here’s the problem: you’re paying $12/month just to store files, then another $20/month per person for Replay to get basic audio feedback features. That’s $32/month minimum for what should be a simple collaboration workflow.

Meanwhile, you’re still stuck with vague email feedback. Your vocalist says "something’s off in the verse," and you spend 20 minutes listening on repeat trying to guess which verse and what’s wrong. You upload v2, v3, v4—each time wondering if you fixed the right thing.

If you’re a music producer, mixing engineer, or audio professional who’s tired of paying premium prices for basic collaboration—or you’re frustrated with Dropbox’s lack of audio-specific features—this guide is for you.

In this article, we’ll walk through exactly what happens when you switch from Dropbox to Feedtracks: what you gain, what you give up, how to migrate your files, and how to adjust your workflow. No marketing fluff—just the practical reality of making the switch.

Quick Summary (TL;DR)

  • Why switch: Get audio-specific collaboration features at 1/5 the cost of Dropbox + Replay ($6.99/month vs $32/month)
  • What you gain: Timestamped waveform feedback, permanent links, built-in audio player, version tracking—all included
  • What you give up: Desktop sync, unlimited storage capacity, some integrations
  • Migration time: 1-3 hours for most producers (backup files → upload to Feedtracks → update links)
  • Best approach: Use both (Dropbox for comprehensive backup, Feedtracks for client collaboration)
  • Who should switch: Producers regularly sharing audio for feedback, mixing engineers with remote clients, audio professionals tired of email feedback loops

Why Music Producers Are Leaving Dropbox

Let’s be honest about what’s driving the switch.

The Cost Problem

Dropbox’s pricing makes sense for general file storage. The problem is audio collaboration.

Basic Dropbox Plus: $11.99/month gets you 2TB storage. Solid value—except there’s no built-in way for clients to give you timestamped feedback on audio. You’re back to email, text messages, and vague comments.

Dropbox Replay add-on: This gives you timestamped comments and waveform visualization. Cost? $20/month per user. If you have one collaborator who needs Replay access, that’s $31.99/month total. Add a second collaborator? $51.99/month.

Feedtracks equivalent: All collaboration features included at $6.99/month for 100GB. One price, unlimited sharing with unlimited clients.

The math is stark: you’re paying 4-5x more for Dropbox + Replay versus Feedtracks for the same core audio collaboration features.

The Audio Workflow Gap

Dropbox wasn’t built for audio professionals. It’s file storage that happens to work with audio files.

No waveform-first interface: When you open a folder with 50 audio files in Dropbox, you see file names. "Mix_Final_v3_FINAL_real.wav" tells you nothing. Feedtracks shows waveforms, making visual identification instant.

Comments aren’t on the audio: Without Replay, feedback happens via email. With Replay (at $20/month extra), you get timestamped comments—but it’s an add-on to a general storage platform, not a native audio tool.

Links can break: Share a Dropbox link to a file, then reorganize your folders? The link breaks. Clients lose access. You have to re-share. Feedtracks links stay permanent regardless of how you organize files internally.

No audio player by default: Basic Dropbox requires clients to download files to listen. There’s no in-browser audio player unless you pay for Replay.

The Collaboration Frustration

Here’s a typical Dropbox workflow without Replay:

  1. Export mix, upload to Dropbox
  2. Share link with client
  3. Client downloads file (200MB+)
  4. Client listens in iTunes/VLC/whatever
  5. Client sends email: "Vocals are too loud in the second chorus"
  6. You listen to the entire track trying to find "the second chorus"
  7. Make changes based on your guess
  8. Re-upload, re-share link
  9. Repeat until client approves (or gives up)

Each revision cycle takes hours because you’re guessing what clients mean.

Add Replay for $20/month and this improves—but you’re still paying premium pricing for features that should be standard in audio collaboration tools.

What You Actually Get with Feedtracks

Let’s break down what changes when you switch.

Timestamped Waveform Comments (Built-In)

This is the core difference. Your client clicks directly on the waveform at 2:15 and types "vocals too loud here." You see the exact timestamp on the exact waveform. No guessing, no email threads, no confusion.

Real-world impact: A mix revision that took 3 back-and-forth rounds over 2 days now gets resolved in one round because feedback is precise.

Built-In Audio Player with Waveform Display

Clients click your link and audio plays immediately in their browser. They see the waveform while listening. No downloads required unless they want the file locally.

Why this matters: Your non-technical clients (artists, label managers, podcast hosts) don’t need to know what a WAV file is or how to open it. They click, it plays, they comment.

Permanent Storage That Never Expires

Upload a file to Feedtracks, and the link stays active as long as you keep the file. Projects that take 3 months? No problem. Client wants to reference the mix 6 months later? Link still works.

Compare to WeTransfer’s 7-day expiry or temporary file transfer services—or even Dropbox links that break when you reorganize folders.

Version Tracking Built for Audio

Upload Mix_v1, Mix_v2, Mix_v3 to the same location. Clients can compare versions side-by-side to hear exactly what changed. This is native to the platform, not bolted on.

Folder Organization by Project/Client

Create folders for each client, each album, each project—however you work. Keep everything organized without mixing personal projects with client work.

All Features Included (No Per-User Fees)

$6.99/month includes all collaboration features. Share with unlimited clients. No per-user fees, no hidden add-ons, no surprise charges when a second person needs to leave feedback.

What You Give Up (Be Honest About Trade-Offs)

Switching isn’t all upside. Here’s what you lose.

No Desktop Sync

Feedtracks is browser-based. There’s no local folder that automatically syncs like Dropbox. You upload files through the web interface.

What this means: You can’t work directly from a synced cloud folder in your DAW. You export finished mixes and upload them manually. For active session work, you still work locally, then upload completed versions.

Who this affects: Producers who relied on Dropbox’s "save to folder, auto-uploads" workflow. You’ll need to consciously upload files rather than having them sync automatically.

Workaround: Keep working locally in your DAW (which you should be doing anyway—never work directly from cloud storage). Upload finished mixes to Feedtracks for client review.

Smaller Storage Capacity

Feedtracks Pro is 100GB for $6.99/month. Premium is 500GB for $12.99/month. Dropbox Plus is 2TB for $11.99/month.

What this means: Feedtracks isn’t designed to archive your entire 10-year project history and 500GB sample library. It’s for active collaboration—current projects, client work, ongoing mixes.

Who this affects: Producers who need terabytes of archive storage.

Workaround: Use the hybrid approach (more below)—Dropbox or Google Drive for comprehensive backup/archive, Feedtracks for active client collaboration.

5GB File Size Limit

Feedtracks handles files up to 5GB each. Dropbox handles up to 2TB per file.

What this means: Most audio files are under 5GB (even full stem exports). But if you’re sending massive uncompressed multitrack sessions or video + audio files exceeding 5GB, you’ll hit the limit.

Who this affects: Film score composers working with video, large session exports exceeding 5GB.

Workaround: For files over 5GB, use Dropbox Transfer, MASV, or split sessions into stems under the limit.

Fewer Third-Party Integrations

Dropbox integrates with Slack, Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Adobe Creative Cloud, and hundreds of other tools. Feedtracks integrates with core audio workflows but doesn’t have the extensive app ecosystem.

What this means: If your workflow relies on Dropbox-specific integrations (automated Slack notifications when files are added, Zapier workflows, etc.), you’ll need to adapt.

Who this affects: Teams with complex automation workflows built around Dropbox.

Not a General File Storage Replacement

Dropbox stores PDFs, images, documents, spreadsheets, videos—everything. Feedtracks is built for audio files.

What this means: If you store contracts, session notes, cover art, and miscellaneous files alongside your audio, you’ll still need another solution for those.

Who this affects: Anyone using Dropbox as their only cloud storage.

Workaround: Keep Google Drive or Dropbox for general files, use Feedtracks specifically for audio collaboration.

The Hybrid Approach (What Most Professionals Do)

Here’s the reality: most producers who "switch" don’t completely abandon Dropbox. They use both platforms for different jobs.

Common Professional Setup

Dropbox (or Google Drive): 2TB for $9.99-11.99/month

  • Complete backup of all projects, stems, samples, archives
  • Desktop sync for local workflow
  • General file storage (contracts, images, documents)
  • Long-term archiving of completed projects

Feedtracks: 100GB for $6.99/month

  • Active client projects requiring feedback
  • Current mixes in revision
  • Collaboration with remote musicians/clients
  • Projects needing timestamped comments

Local external drive: One-time cost

  • Offline redundancy backup
  • Working drive for DAW sessions

Total cost: $15-18/month for comprehensive backup + audio-specific collaboration

Why This Works Better Than Dropbox Alone

You’re not trying to make one platform do everything. Each tool does what it’s best at:

  • Dropbox handles: Mass storage, desktop sync, comprehensive backup, general files
  • Feedtracks handles: Audio collaboration, precise feedback, waveform comments, client interaction
  • Local drive provides: Fast DAW performance, offline access, redundancy

Compare this to Dropbox + Replay:

  • Dropbox Plus: $11.99/month
  • Replay for one user: $20/month
  • Total: $31.99/month

The hybrid approach costs half as much and gives you better-fit tools for each job.

When Hybrid Makes Sense

Choose the hybrid approach if you:

  • Have years of archived projects you want to keep accessible
  • Need comprehensive backup for all file types
  • Value desktop sync for non-audio files
  • Want both reliable backup AND audio-specific collaboration
  • Work with clients who need precise timestamped feedback

Choose Feedtracks-only if you:

  • Only need 100-500GB total
  • Don’t care about desktop sync
  • Focus exclusively on audio collaboration
  • Want the lowest-cost solution
  • Archive completed projects to local drives instead of cloud

Step-by-Step Migration Guide

If you’re ready to switch, here’s the practical process.

Step 1: Audit Your Dropbox Storage (20-30 minutes)

Figure out what you’re actually storing:

Open Dropbox and categorize your files:

  • Active projects (currently working on): ___GB
  • Recent client work (last 6 months): ___GB
  • Archive projects (1+ years old): ___GB
  • Sample libraries: ___GB
  • General files (docs, images, etc.): ___GB

Why this matters: Most producers discover 70-80% is archival material they rarely access. You don’t need to move everything—just active collaboration projects.

Action: Make a list of folders you actually need for current work. These go to Feedtracks. The rest stays in Dropbox or moves to cheaper archive storage.

Step 2: Sign Up for Feedtracks (5 minutes)

  1. Go to feedtracks.com
  2. Create account (start with free 1GB to test)
  3. Explore the interface, upload one test file
  4. Share the test file with yourself to see how clients experience it

Pro tip: Don’t cancel Dropbox yet. Run both in parallel for 2-4 weeks to ensure the transition works smoothly.

Step 3: Upload Active Projects (1-3 hours depending on file size)

For current client projects:

  1. Create folder in Feedtracks for each client or project
  2. Download files from Dropbox you want to migrate
  3. Upload to appropriate Feedtracks folder
  4. Verify upload completed successfully
  5. Test playback and waveform display

For ongoing mixes:

  1. Upload current versions (Mix_v1, Mix_v2, etc.)
  2. Add any context notes to the project
  3. Generate share links
  4. Test links in incognito mode to confirm they work

Organization tip: Mirror your Dropbox structure initially so you don’t get confused. You can reorganize later once you’re comfortable.

Send a quick message to active collaborators:

"Hey! I’m switching from Dropbox to Feedtracks for audio collaboration. It’s a platform built specifically for music—you’ll be able to leave timestamped comments directly on the waveform instead of writing long emails.

From now on, I’ll send you Feedtracks links. Just click the link, the audio plays in your browser, and you can click anywhere on the waveform to leave a comment at that exact timestamp. No downloads required.

Here’s a test link with our current mix: [link]

Let me know if you have any issues!"

Update your workflow templates:

  • Email signatures
  • Saved message templates
  • Project management tools
  • Client onboarding documents

Step 5: Decide What to Do with Dropbox (Depends on your needs)

Option A: Keep Dropbox for Archive (Recommended for pros)

  • Keep Dropbox subscription
  • Move active collaboration to Feedtracks
  • Use Dropbox for long-term archive and backup
  • Total cost: ~$18/month for both

Option B: Downgrade Dropbox

  • Downgrade to free tier (2GB) or cheaper plan
  • Keep only essential archives in Dropbox
  • Move active work entirely to Feedtracks
  • Total cost: $6.99/month (Feedtracks only)

Option C: Cancel Dropbox Completely

  • Download everything to external drive
  • Archive old projects locally
  • Use Feedtracks for all cloud collaboration
  • Total cost: $6.99/month + one-time external drive cost

Option D: Switch to Cheaper Archive Storage

  • Cancel Dropbox
  • Move archives to Google Drive ($9.99/month for 2TB)
  • Use Feedtracks for collaboration
  • Total cost: ~$17/month (cheaper than Dropbox + Replay)

Step 6: Run Parallel for 2-4 Weeks (Verification period)

Don’t immediately delete everything from Dropbox. Run both services simultaneously while you verify:

  • All critical files uploaded successfully
  • Collaborators can access Feedtracks links
  • You’re comfortable with the new workflow
  • Nothing important got lost in migration

Once you’re confident (typically 2-4 weeks), make your final Dropbox decision (keep, downgrade, or cancel).

Workflow Adjustments You’ll Need to Make

Switching platforms means adapting how you work. Here’s what changes.

How File Sharing Changes

Old Dropbox workflow:

  1. Save file to Dropbox folder (auto-syncs)
  2. Right-click → Share → Copy link
  3. Send link to client
  4. Client downloads file
  5. Client sends feedback via email

New Feedtracks workflow:

  1. Export finished mix from DAW
  2. Upload to Feedtracks project folder
  3. Share link with client
  4. Client clicks link, audio plays in browser with waveform
  5. Client clicks waveform at specific timestamps to leave comments
  6. You see all feedback organized by timestamp

What’s better: Feedback is precise, no downloads required, all comments in one place on the waveform.

What takes adjustment: You manually upload instead of auto-sync. Takes 2-3 projects to become automatic.

How Version Management Changes

Old Dropbox workflow:

  • Upload Mix_v1.wav
  • Upload Mix_v2.wav to same folder
  • Client downloads both, compares manually
  • Feedback via email about which version they prefer

New Feedtracks workflow:

  • Upload Mix_v1 to project
  • Upload Mix_v2 to same project
  • Client sees both versions in project timeline
  • Client switches between versions with one click
  • Leaves version-specific comments ("v2 is better but vocal still too loud at 1:32")

What’s better: Built-in version comparison, easier for clients to A/B test.

What takes adjustment: Learning where versions appear in the interface.

How Feedback Collection Changes

Old Dropbox workflow:

  • Client emails: "I think the bass is too loud somewhere in the chorus"
  • You email back: "Which chorus? First or second?"
  • Wait for reply
  • Client: "Second one I think"
  • You guess which section, make changes
  • Re-upload, repeat

New Feedtracks workflow:

  • Client clicks waveform at 2:15, types: "bass too loud here"
  • You see exact timestamp
  • Make change
  • Upload v2
  • Done

What’s better: No back-and-forth guessing. Feedback is actionable immediately.

What takes adjustment: Teaching clients to use the waveform comment feature (takes 30 seconds, most clients find it intuitive).

How DAW Integration Changes

Old Dropbox workflow:

  • Work in DAW with Dropbox folder synced to desktop
  • Save project, auto-syncs to cloud
  • Collaborators can access entire project folder via sync

New Feedtracks workflow:

  • Work in DAW with local project folder
  • Export finished mixes manually
  • Upload mixes to Feedtracks for review
  • For full project sharing, still use Dropbox/Google Drive or zip files

What’s better: Forces good practice (never work directly from cloud folders—causes corruption).

What takes adjustment: Manual export/upload step instead of auto-sync.

Common Migration Questions (Answered Honestly)

Can I move everything from Dropbox to Feedtracks?

Short answer: No, and you shouldn’t try.

Long answer: Feedtracks is designed for audio collaboration, not comprehensive file backup. If you have 2TB in Dropbox, most of it is probably:

  • Old archives you rarely access
  • Sample libraries
  • General files (docs, images, contracts)
  • Completed projects from years ago

Move your active collaboration projects to Feedtracks (typically 20-100GB). Keep archives in Dropbox, Google Drive, or local drives.

Short answer: They keep working until you delete files or cancel Dropbox.

Long answer: When you migrate files to Feedtracks, you’re creating copies. The originals stay in Dropbox until you delete them. Existing Dropbox share links continue working.

Best practice:

  1. Upload files to Feedtracks
  2. Generate new Feedtracks links
  3. Send new links to active collaborators
  4. Keep old Dropbox files/links active for 30 days
  5. After 30 days, delete from Dropbox if no longer needed

How long does migration actually take?

Actual time:

  • Planning/audit: 30 minutes
  • Initial setup: 10 minutes
  • Uploading 50GB: 1-3 hours (depends on internet speed)
  • Updating workflows: 30 minutes
  • Teaching collaborators: 5 minutes per person

Total active time: 2-4 hours for most producers

Calendar time: 2-4 weeks running both services in parallel before committing fully

Will my clients be confused by a new platform?

Honest answer: There’s always some learning curve, but Feedtracks is simpler than Dropbox + Replay.

Client experience:

  1. Click link you send
  2. Audio plays in browser with waveform
  3. Click on waveform to leave comment
  4. Done

No account creation required. No app downloads. No "what’s a WAV file?" confusion.

Real-world data: Most clients figure it out in under 30 seconds. The waveform interface is more intuitive than trying to describe timestamps via email.

Pro tip: Include a one-sentence instruction in your first link:

"Click anywhere on the waveform to leave a timestamped comment"

What if I have more than 100GB of active projects?

Options:

  1. Upgrade to Feedtracks Premium: $12.99/month for 500GB—still cheaper than Dropbox + Replay

  2. Archive older projects: Move completed work to local drive or cheaper cloud storage, keep only current projects in Feedtracks

  3. Use hybrid approach: Active collaboration in Feedtracks (most recent projects), bulk storage in Google Drive ($9.99/month for 2TB)

Most producers find: 100GB is enough for 25-50 active projects. Completed work gets archived locally or to cheaper cloud storage.

Can I go back to Dropbox if I don’t like Feedtracks?

Yes, easily.

Since you’re copying files (not moving them), everything stays in Dropbox until you actively delete it. If you try Feedtracks and decide it’s not for you:

  1. Stop uploading new files to Feedtracks
  2. Resume using Dropbox share links
  3. Cancel Feedtracks subscription
  4. No data lost

Recommendation: Run both for 30 days before making a final decision.

What about Dropbox features I rely on (Paper, Passwords, etc.)?

Honest answer: Feedtracks doesn’t replace those. It replaces Dropbox’s file sharing and collaboration for audio work.

If you use:

  • Dropbox Paper: Keep using it, or switch to Google Docs/Notion
  • Dropbox Passwords: Switch to 1Password, Bitwarden, or similar
  • Dropbox Backup: Keep using Dropbox for backup, add Feedtracks for collaboration

Feedtracks is a specialist tool for audio collaboration, not a complete Dropbox replacement for all use cases.

Real-World Migration Case Studies

Here’s how actual producers made the switch.

Case Study 1: Solo Mix Engineer (Budget-Conscious)

Before Dropbox setup:

  • Dropbox Plus: $11.99/month (2TB)
  • Replay add-on: $20/month
  • Total: $31.99/month

Situation: Working with 5-10 clients per month. Needed timestamped feedback but found Replay expensive. Only using ~200GB of Dropbox storage.

Migration approach:

  1. Signed up for Feedtracks Pro ($6.99/month, 100GB)
  2. Uploaded current client projects to Feedtracks (45GB total)
  3. Moved completed projects to external drive (500GB archive)
  4. Kept Dropbox free tier (2GB) for miscellaneous files
  5. Total new cost: $6.99/month

Result: Saved $25/month ($300/year). Clients loved the waveform comments. Workflow actually improved because feedback was more precise.

Case Study 2: Producer with Large Archive (Hybrid Approach)

Before Dropbox setup:

  • Dropbox Professional: $19.99/month (3TB)
  • No Replay (relied on email feedback)
  • Used 1.8TB (mostly archived projects)

Situation: Needed bulk storage for extensive archive, but frustrated with email feedback from clients.

Migration approach:

  1. Kept Dropbox Professional for archives ($19.99/month)
  2. Added Feedtracks Pro for active collaboration ($6.99/month)
  3. Moved current client projects (60GB) to Feedtracks
  4. Kept Dropbox for all archives, samples, and general files
  5. Total new cost: $26.98/month

Result: Spent $7 more per month but gained audio-specific collaboration features without needing expensive Replay add-on. Better feedback workflow made the cost worthwhile.

Case Study 3: Podcast Producer (Complete Switch)

Before Dropbox setup:

  • Dropbox Plus: $11.99/month
  • Only using 80GB
  • Sharing episodes with hosts for review via Dropbox links
  • Feedback via email ("too much music at the beginning")

Migration approach:

  1. Switched entirely to Feedtracks Premium ($12.99/month, 500GB)
  2. Uploaded all active podcast projects (75GB)
  3. Canceled Dropbox completely
  4. Archived old episodes to external drive
  5. Total new cost: $12.99/month

Result: Spent $1 more per month but gained timestamped waveform comments. Hosts could click on exact moments needing edits instead of writing essays. Workflow significantly faster.

Making Your Decision: Should You Switch?

Let’s cut through the noise.

Switch from Dropbox to Feedtracks if:

  • You regularly share audio for client/collaborator feedback
  • You’re tired of vague email comments without timestamps
  • You’re paying for Dropbox Replay ($20/month per user) just for audio feedback
  • 100-500GB is enough for your active projects
  • You want all collaboration features included without add-ons
  • Budget efficiency matters ($6.99/month vs $32/month for Dropbox + Replay)

Use the hybrid approach (Dropbox + Feedtracks) if:

  • You need terabytes of storage for archives
  • You value desktop sync for non-audio workflows
  • You want both comprehensive backup AND audio-specific collaboration
  • You can budget $15-20/month for tools
  • You work with clients who need precise timestamped feedback

Stay with Dropbox if:

  • You don’t regularly collaborate on audio (solo producer archiving work)
  • Your clients/collaborators are already paying for Dropbox Replay
  • You need extensive third-party integrations Dropbox offers
  • Desktop sync is critical to your workflow
  • Audio-specific features aren’t worth changing platforms

Don’t switch if:

  • You work alone without collaborators (no need for feedback features)
  • You need more than 500GB and can’t afford hybrid approach
  • Your workflow is heavily integrated with Dropbox-specific tools
  • Change itself adds more friction than current pain points

The Bottom Line

Best for comprehensive backup: Dropbox ($11.99/month, 2TB) or Google Drive ($9.99/month, 2TB)—maximum storage, reliable sync

Best for audio collaboration: Feedtracks ($6.99/month, 100GB)—timestamped waveform feedback, permanent links, all features included

Best value for audio professionals: Hybrid approach—Google Drive for archive ($9.99/month) + Feedtracks for collaboration ($6.99/month) = $16.98/month total (still cheaper than Dropbox + Replay at $32/month)

Most cost-effective: Feedtracks-only ($6.99/month) if 100GB is enough and you archive completed work locally

For most music producers and audio professionals who regularly collaborate with remote clients, the switch makes sense financially and workflow-wise. You get better-fit tools for less money.

The question isn’t whether Dropbox is good—it’s whether you’re using the right tool for your specific job. Dropbox excels at general file storage and backup. Feedtracks excels at audio collaboration and feedback.

Stop trying to make one platform do everything. Use specialized tools for specialized work.

If email feedback threads and vague comments are killing your momentum, switching to Feedtracks pays for itself in the first saved revision cycle. If comprehensive backup and desktop sync are your priorities, keep Dropbox for that and add Feedtracks for collaboration.

The best solution isn’t one platform—it’s the right combination of tools that removes friction from your specific workflow.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I actually transfer files from Dropbox to Feedtracks?

There’s no automated migration tool (yet). The process is manual but straightforward:

  1. Download files from Dropbox to your computer
  2. Upload files to Feedtracks via web interface
  3. Organize into folders as needed

For large libraries, this takes 1-3 hours depending on file size and internet speed. Most producers do it in batches over a few days.

Will Feedtracks work with my DAW?

Feedtracks is platform-agnostic—it works with audio files from any DAW (Pro Tools, Logic, Ableton, FL Studio, Cubase, etc.). Export your mix as WAV, MP3, or other audio format, upload to Feedtracks, share with clients. The DAW you use doesn’t matter.

Can clients download files from Feedtracks or only stream?

Both. Clients can stream audio in-browser with the built-in player, or download files if they need local copies. You control download permissions when sharing links.

What happens to my files if I cancel Feedtracks?

You can download all your files before canceling. Feedtracks doesn’t hold your data hostage—you own your content and can export everything. Links stop working after cancellation, but you keep the original files.

Is Feedtracks secure enough for unreleased music?

Yes. Files are encrypted in transit (HTTPS) and at rest. You control who has access via share links. For maximum security, you can password-protect shares. Feedtracks explicitly doesn’t use uploaded content for AI training (unlike some platforms that updated ToS in 2025).

Can I use Feedtracks for free to test before switching?

Yes. The free tier includes 1GB storage with all collaboration features (timestamped waveform comments, permanent links, built-in player). Upload a project, share with a collaborator, test the workflow before committing to paid plans.

What if my internet is slow—will uploads take forever?

Upload speed depends on your internet connection. A 1GB file takes about 10 minutes on typical home internet (100 Mbps upload). If you have slow internet, upload overnight or during off-hours. Once uploaded, files stay in Feedtracks—you only upload once per file.

Can I organize files the same way I did in Dropbox?

Yes. Feedtracks has folders and projects, so you can organize by client, album, date, or however you prefer. You can recreate your Dropbox structure or design a new organization system.

Feedtracks Team

Building the future of audio collaboration at Feedtracks. We help musicians, producers, and audio engineers share and collaborate on audio projects with timestamped feedback and professional tools.

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