If your productivity depends on the Google cloud and you store your documents, presentations and spreadsheets in Google Drive, a thief was able to access all your files simply by launching the Drive app on a stolen device.
Fortunately enough, this won’t be possible going forward as Google Drive 3.0 is now live in the App Store with a handy new passcode feature…
Like passcode protection in Dropbox, Day One and a number of other App Store apps, Google Drive now lets you restrict access to the application using a four-digit passcode (which should be different than your iPhone’s lock screen passcode, by the way).
Simply launch Drive, go to the app’s settings and hit the new Passcode Lock option. On the next screen, flip the Passcode Lock switch to ON to set a four-digit password.
I’ve also noticed that launching Google Drive on an iPhone or iPad now puts up a message offering to install Google’s newly released standalone Sheet and Docs apps: first for editing spreadsheets on the go and the other for Google documents.
Adding up to user confusion, enabling Drive access in standalone Docs and Sheets apps yanks you into Drive upon tapping on a cloud documents in either app. Worse, may not even realize it because all three apps have a remarkably similar appearance.
According to Dave Mark of The Loop, Google’s version of Keynote and PowerPoint called Slides is said to be on its way to iOS soon.
Download Google Drive 3.0 free in the App Store.
The app is universal and requires iOS 7.0 or later.
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