Dropbox and Antigravity?
As that folder was set to always remain on the hard drive, I did not understand why that was. But even worse, the operation deleted the latest source files from my disk! I panicked and ran to my laptop, disabled the wifi, and recovered the files from the laptop's SSD. Once I felt my code was secure, I returned to my desktop computer. The Dropbox error was a synchronization error, as a file that was opened could not be synchronized. I was viewing an STL file from that folder on MeshLab. Once I closed that app, Dropbox continued to function as normal, and I could see all the deleted files reappear on it.
I suppose the moral of the story is that unusual things can happen when using Dropbox. Why stopping sharing a folder would cause the temporary deletion of its content, to perhaps later re-download it from the cloud, is beyond my comprehension, but while the end result was ok, it stressed me out mid-way.
Over the years, I have encountered various issues with Dropbox, so I am now moving away from it. While convenient sometimes, you are also at the mercy of the all-mighty cloud services. They began with a simple proposition that, over time, has become too complicated, with numerous side effects that are difficult to anticipate. I am aware of companies that have lost the creation dates of their files due to a folder renaming error. Their support for Linux has been inconsistent.
If you want to use a Dropbox folder with Google's Antigravity to develop code from different computers, ensure that it is set to always be available on that disk; otherwise, you won't be able to view the chats you had on a different computer.
Update:
One week later, it appears that the work I do on one computer does not appear on another, suggesting that the information is no longer stored in the working folder but somewhere else. I just noticed that when away from home :-)
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