Google offers some new options for storage
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By Steve Ragan Aug 10, 2007, 15:57 GMT
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“As a customer I really don’t see the value. For $500 I could forgo the Google storage and buy one of those snazzy Seagate drives. At that price, I could also explore a service like Amazon’s S3. The benefit to both the Amazon and Seagate solutions: I wouldn’t be dependent on Google,” added Dignan.
I believe the whole point is not just for the space, but for the hosting of said space. IE: Providing a reliable and speedy connection to the Internet for your files to live and be accessed. That is something that a Seagate hard drive can't offer on it's own...
- Pat
I'm happy with my usb stick
Well AOL already does this with XDrive and taking part in its service doesn't cost you money. Please explain why I would want to pay for something when I can get it for free?
Also, what happens when you stop paying but you have over 9 gigs worth of stuff on your storage space? Do you just loose all your files? If so, uh, I would say no thank you.
What Google is doing is quite smart. They have offered huge amounts of space on Gmail and their other products so that some have learned to psychologically avert any notion of deleting any of their online transactions via google...You can think of this as the hook. Now Google is trying to take advantage of those who have been influenced by putting a price tag on something these people can't live without. This might not necessarily apply to you but I am sure there are many out there who feel more secure after seeing this news.
Furthermore, please note that Google isn't just getting money, they are getting INFORMATION and clues and learning more about you with the details you store in this extra space - which ultimately benefits their search -> advertising -> profit!
People should consider using an unlimited online storage service like Carbonite (www.carbonite.com)--only $50 per year and you can use it for all of your files, not just Google apps.
I will keep using my 4GB Flash Drive ($19.95) and my 120GB External Drive when needed ($79.95) and I think I will still be way ahead of the game.
But thanks Google, maybe it will bloom into something better in the future. And no matter what is said by others, I will always wonder about security in an off-site, owned-by-others storage arena.
'Furthermore, please note that Google isn't just getting money, they are getting INFORMATION and clues and learning more about you with the details you store in this extra space - which ultimately benefits their search -> advertising -> profit!'
Right on! You're paying them to invade more of your privacy. What will the masterminds at Google think of next?
Google files, which you can buy to be placed in the storage you've also purchased!
I have been an enthusiastic DriveHQ user for almost 2 years. Their service is great!
All GDrive features are long available and better on DriveHQ.com. Visit www.drivehq.com and watch the demo.
# Backup. DriveHQ Online Backup works great. It has a lot of high-end features, much better than GDrive, including versioning, scheduled backup, encrypted storage, compressed upload, incremental backup and resuming, etc.
# Sync. DriveHQ FileManager can sync multiple PCs, multiple user accounts.
# VPN-less access. You can access your data from anywhere using a web browser, any FTP client, or DriveHQ Cline software, or SMTP/POP3 email with Outlook!
# Collaborate. DriveHQ Group Account service is a true enterprise class collaboration platform. You can easily share folders to different people with different access rights. DriveHQ Group Account owner / admin can create/manage/delete sub-accounts.
# Disconnected access. On the plane? VPN broken? All your files are still accessible as DriveHQ FileManager can cache the data for offline access! DriveHQ even offers SMTP/POP3 emails for offline Outlook access with unlimited email storage!
DriveHQ offers basic service for free. So why the hype and why the wait?
I have 2400 photos takeing up memory in my computer- and I have them all stored in 2 or 3 different programs because we have changed digital cameras 3 times. The first used Coolpix, the second Panviz ? the last H.P. and now in Adobe 3.2 because as I understood it, I had to download it in order to transfer a few to my Ipod. My question, are all 2400 X 3, (+what I find in my documents>pictures) or are all only stored once but accesible in all those no longer used programs. Is there something simple and cheap I can use to store them in? and will that remove them from my computer and free up some memory? A techy dummy. Mahalo.
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