Google - Drive Manual
Google - Drive Manual
If you would like to set up a personal Google Drive account for use outside of work, you need to register
for a free Google account at https://accounts.google.com/SignUp. The process for accessing a personal
Google account is very similar to the process you will follow to access your SOU Google Drive, but this
handout only covers how to use your SOU Google Drive.
Do not store work-related data, especially if it contains student information, in your personal Google
Drive account or in any personal cloud storage account, such as Dropbox, as doing so may expose your
personal cloud storage account to subpoena should you ever be the subject of a legal investigation
pertaining to your position at SOU. Likewise, we strongly discourage you from storing personal data in
your SOU Google Drive account.
Files stored in your SOU Google Drive go away when you leave SOU. That means that any files within
your Google Drive that you have shared with colleagues will no longer be accessible to them after you
are gone. That is why the Information Technology department recommends that you use Team Drives
to share documents that must remain available to others after you leave. See Pages 7 and 8 for
details.
Google provides their free account users with 15 GB of Google Drive storage as of January 2018. To view
Google’s current upgrade pricing for personal accounts, please visit https://one.google.com/about.
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Using Google Drive on the Web
How to Get There
You can access Google Drive’s web interface
from any device with an Internet connection
and a web browser by navigating your web
browser to https://drive.google.com. Be
sure to log in using your full SOU email
address so that Google redirects you to our
InsideSOU login page where you can enter
your SOU username and password.
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Uploading New Files and Folders
Using the button, you can select to create a new
folder within your Google Drive or search your computer
for files or folders to upload using their respective upload
buttons.
Clicking the download icon will prompt your web browser to download the file.
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to download the file. Please note that Google Drive downloads folders as .zip files, which you need to
extract on your computer before you can view the files. If you need help with unzipping your download,
contact your Computing Coordinator.
Once you have deleted an item out of your Google Drive’s Trash folder, there is no way for the SOU
Information Technology department to recover it, nor will Google help you recover it.
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Searching for Files
If you need to find a file in a hurry, or you do not remember where you saved it within your Google
Drive, you can use the Search Bar to find it. By clicking on the down arrow at the rightmost edge of the
Search Bar, you can expose several useful advanced search features.
Moving Files
Google Drive’s web interface supports dragging and dropping files and folders into other folders, but
sometimes you will need to move your files and folders around using the right-click menu. With any
number of items selected, right-click on one of the items and select from the menu.
You may have to use the back arrow in the move window in order to navigate to a higher-level folder.
Once you have selected a destination, click to finish the move. You can also use the small
folder icon in the bottom-right corner of the move window to create a new folder within the current
folder that you have navigated to.
you can right-click on it and select from the menu to create a link to that file or
folder within your My Drive.
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1. Link to Share – This is a direct link to
your file or folder in Google Drive.
Send it to someone to share it with
them.
2. Link Sharing Settings – This is where
you control who can access your file
or folder using the sharing link. See
the next page for more details.
3. Expiration Date – Use this button to
set an expiration date on someone’s
permission to access your file or
folder.
4. Permissions – Use this button to
modify what this person can do with
your file or folder. Options include:
Can View, Can Comment (and view),
and Can Edit (and comment and
view).
5. Unshare Button – Use this button to
revoke someone’s access to your file
or folder.
6. Invitation Field – Use the invitation field and the permissions button next to it to grant new
people access to your file or folder.
7. Permissions Control – Use these checkboxes to fine-tune control what people can do with your
file or folder.
1. Off – Only people whom you have specifically shared your document with can use the link to
access it. Nobody else can access it or search for it, even if they have received the link from
someone.
2. Anyone at SOU with the link – If somebody has the link and is a member of SOU, they can
access your document, but they cannot search for it. This is a great option if you want people to
be able to forward your link to other people at SOU but you don’t want it to be searchable or
accessible to persons outside of the university.
3. Anyone at SOU – If somebody is a member of SOU, they can search for you document and
access it without even needing the link.
4. Anyone with the link – If somebody has the link, they can access your document, but it is not
searchable.
5. Public on the web – Your document is fully searchable and accessible to anyone on the Internet.
You should avoid this setting unless you have a specific reason to share your document with the
entire world.
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Versioning
Google Drive supports versioning, which means it
will track recent changes to your files and let you roll
back to an earlier version of your document. You can
go back 30 days in time to recover a previous version
of your files, although there is a way to tell Google to
retain an older version of your file indefinitely (see
below).
When uploading a file using the web interface that matches a filename that is already in your Google
Drive—even if it is not in the same folder—you will be presented with the version number of the
document in the upload status window along with a button that enables you to keep the file as a
separate file if you prefer that solution. If you decide to keep the file as a separate file, Google Drive will
rename it to avoid a conflict with the original file by appending a number to the end of the filename.
To view the versions that Google Drive has saved for one of your files, right-click on it and select
On the Versions Screen for that file, you can upload another version of the file directly, you can
download or delete old versions of files, or you can tell Google Drive to keep the file forever.
is the button you will see when Google Drive is not yet keeping the file forever. You
have to click that button in order to tell Google Drive to save the file indefinitely.
is the button you will see when Google Drive is already keeping the file forever.
Clicking that button tells Google Drive to stop saving the file indefinitely.
Team Drives
Team Drives are separate from your personal Google Drive account, which is contained under My Drive,
and are an ideal location to store files and folders that must be shared persistently with an entire team,
regardless of turnover, because items in Team Drives are not tied to any one person’s account.
Everything that you can do within your My Drive you can do within a Team Drive, and Google Drive
works exactly the same in both locations—the only difference is that your Team Drive files are not tied
directly to your account.
If you are a department chair or division director, please let your Computing Coordinator know if a
departing employee from your area needs to have his or her Google Drive files transferred to a Team
Drive or another employee’s Google Drive to avoid losing that data when we decommission the
departing employee’s account!
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Accessing Team Drives
To access your Team Drives, click on the Team
Drives icon in the Drives Selector area of the
Google Drive web interface. This will take you to
the Team Drives overview page where you can
view and access each Team Drive that you are a
member of. You can also click the arrow next to
the Team Drives icon to access your Team Drives
from a dropdown menu.
or right-click on the Team Drives icon and select from the menu that appears.
You can set permissions for each person in your team by selecting the option.
By default, all team members are invited to your Team Drive with full access, but you can restrict access
as necessary.
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How to Install the Google Drive File Stream Client
Log in to your Google Drive web interface, click on the Settings
button (refer to “Navigating the Google Drive Web Interface”
section earlier in this handout), and then select Download
Drive File Stream for Windows/Macintosh. Google should
detect which platform you are on and will make the correct
download file available to you. Save the file to a folder on your
computer, then launch it and install it as you would any piece
of software. If you need assistance with installing Google Drive
File Stream, contact your Computing Coordinator.
The Google Drive File Stream client does cache some of your files locally in order to present them to you
speedily, but it will intelligently manage the size of that cache. In my testing, there was no noticeable
delay in opening a large file (about 300 megabytes in size) while connected to our campus network, but
if you are using a slow Internet connection, you may notice a delay. In the coming section “How to Make
Files Available Offline,” you will learn how to force Google Drive File Stream to download a permanent,
synchronized copy of your data to your computer, which will enable you to access that data immediately
regardless of your Internet connectivity.
To make files that have been shared with you, but not through a Team Drive, available in Google Drive
File Stream, you must first save those files to your own Google Drive account by right-clicking on them in
the Google Drive web interface and then selecting from the menu. This will
create a link to that file within your Google Drive account, not a separate copy. It will also cause Google
Drive File Stream to make that file available to you on your devices. Rest assured that your collaborators
will see any changes that you make to the file on your device. If you want to create a separate, personal
copy of a file that has been shared with you, just save the file with a different name within your My
Drive. The new file will be uploaded to Google Drive as your file to work with exclusively, unless you
decide to share it with someone later. It will not inherit the sharing permissions of the original file.
Windows
The Windows version of the Google Drive File Stream client,
once installed, will place a small icon in your taskbar to indicate
that it is running, and it will create a new drive on your
computer called Google Drive File Stream (G:). You can access this “virtual drive” as though it were a
permanently connected flash drive. NOTE: If you already have a drive attached to your computer that
has been assigned the G: label, the Google Drive File Stream drive will appear with a different drive
letter.
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Under the G: drive, you will be presented with a subfolder called My Drive and also one for your Team
Drives. Both function the same, but for the purposes of this handout I am only going to cover My Drive.
Under your My Drive, you will find the root contents of your Google Drive account—in other words, an
overview of all of your top-level files and folders. You can work with these folders and files just as
though you were working with folders and files on a flash drive. You can move files, create new folders,
rename items, and add new files and folders to your Google Drive just by placing them anywhere within
your My Drive folder.
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Macintosh
The Macintosh version of Google Drive File Stream,
once installed, will place a small icon in your
Macintosh’s status menu to indicate that it is running, and it will create a drive on your computer called
Google Drive. You can access this “virtual drive” as though it were a permanently connected flash drive.
Under the Google Drive, you will be presented with a subfolder called My Drive and also one for your
Team Drives. Both function the same, but for the purposes of this handout I am only going to cover My
Drive.
Under your My Drive, you will find the root contents of your Google Drive account—in other words, an
overview of all of your top-level files and folders. You can work with these folders and files just as
though you were working with folders and files on a flash drive. You can move files, create new folders,
rename items, and add new files and folders to your Google Drive just by placing them anywhere within
your My Drive folder.
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How to Make Files Available Offline
In the Macintosh version of Google Drive File Stream, you can make any number of files or folders
available offline by right-clicking (or CTRL-clicking) on however many of them you have selected, then
hover your mouse pointer over Drive File Stream in the options menu (or click on it) and select
“Available offline” when it appears in the final menu. To undo making a file available offline, repeat the
same process but select “Online only” from the final menu.
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