
The moves come as Dropbox, now valued at around $10 billion, is tipped as an IPO candidate.

There are currently over 300,000 apps that integrate the Dropbox cloud platform, according to Ilya Fushman, the company’s head of product. It’s also adding two new APIs for developers to have more flexible ways to show documents to users. They include a lot of new (and more secure) ways to share documents, and an interesting move that points to Dropbox’s bigger platform ambitions: the introduction of full-text search.
Today, the startup is making a move to sweeten the deal, unveiling a host of new features to enhance Dropbox for Business. But of those, only around 80,000 have opted so far to use Dropbox for Business, the company’s premium enterprise tier launched earlier this year.

Dropbox, now at 300 million users globally, says that there are 4 million businesses today using its cloud-based platform to store, distribute and share documents.
