Finally, . For every app that ran on Electron (Slack, Discord, Teams), users grew wary of having a 500MB memory-hungry wrapper for what was essentially a website. Many realized that pinning the Paper tab in their browser achieved 90% of the same effect.
The most immediate difference was . A browser is a carnival of distraction—tabs for email, tabs for social media, tabs for that recipe you’ll never make. The Paper desktop app stripped all of that away. It offered a zen mode by default: no URL bar, no bookmark toolbar, no extensions fighting for attention. Just a blank, beautiful canvas and your cursor.
First, . The company realized that being "just a sync folder" wasn't enough. They bought HelloSign, they launched Vault, and they re-focused on a unified "Dropbox" experience. Paper became a secondary feature, not the flagship.
So why isn’t everyone using Dropbox Paper Desktop today? The answer lies not in the software’s quality, but in the market’s gravity.