Dropbox, Q1
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For the full year 2026, the company raised total revenue guidance by $12 million from a prior range of $2.485 billion to $2.5 billion to a revised range of $2.497 billion to $2.512 billion, adding that it is expecting a currency tailwind of about $27 million. Consensus is $2.50 billion.
Cloud storage company Dropbox (NASDAQ:DBX) reported revenue ahead of Wall Street’s expectations in Q1 CY2026, but sales were flat year on year at $629.5 million. Its non-GAAP profit of $0.76 per share was 9.
Dropbox's storage system works like an online hard drive, storing your files in a cloud-based location that you can access from your computer, phone and tablet apps, or from the Dropbox website. As well as storing personal files, you can use the system to ...
"We delivered a strong start to the year, exceeding the high end of our guidance across revenue and operating margin with year-over-year revenue growth of 2%, excluding FormSwift, and unlevered free cash flow margin of 38%." (Co-Founder, Interim President, CEO & Chairman Andrew Houston)
Dropbox, a San Francisco tech company best known for its file-hosting tools, is slashing 20% of its workforce. The cut is slated to leave 528 employees out of work — including 174 in California. This time, Dropbox is dramatically paring back its ...
Dropbox has an automatic photo upload feature that's pretty wonderful. Turn it on, and it automatically uploads every picture you take to its server. But unless you adjust your sync settings, it's also a good way to chew through all your hard drive space ...
Dropbox recently reported its performance figures for the first quarter of the year – the cloud storage company’s first ever quarterly results announcement since it went public in March – and it did not disappoint. The company’s continued push into ...
Jessica Livingston, co-founder of seed stage investment firm Y Combinator wrote a $3,000 check to Houston and a $12,000 check to Dropbox's parent company, Evenflow. Y Combinator President Sam Altman posted an image of the checks in a tweet. In honor of ...
A man serving 10 years in prison for child pornography offenses failed in his bid to convince the Seventh Circuit that the Dropbox files behind his conviction were obtained from an unreasonable search and seizure.