FREE MOBILE CLOUD COMPUTING CONCEPTS - TRAINING_MODULES_WITH_TONS_OF_VIDEOS
Best
free or low cost storage cloud providers
Recently, Dropbox the popular
cloud-storage company doubled the amount of free space you got for inviting friends to Dropbox. How much is that? For every friend you'd invite who installed Dropbox, you'd both get 500 more MBs of free space. With a free account, you can invite up to 32 people for a grand total
of 16 GB of extra space. Pro,
read paid, accounts now earn
1 GB per referral, for a total of 32 GB of extra space. Better still, you get this space retroactively if you'd already gotten
people to give Dropbox a try.
That's great, but does it make Dropbox the best of the personal cloud storage services? Maybe. Everyone, and I mean
everyone, is offering some kind of infrastructure as a service (IaaS) cloud services lately. In IaaS that you find file storage,
ala Dropbox, but other companies like Apple, Google and Microsoft are also offering storage, media serving, and other IaaS
ad hoc services for either free or minimal prices.
The six best personal cloud storage options (gallery)
These services are transforming
rapidly. Prices, amounts of free storage, and additional services beyond pure storage are constantly being changed. Here's
what's what with them though in the spring of 2012.
Amazon Cloud Drive/Player When you think Amazon and clouds you probably think about Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), the biggest public cloud service. But, Amazon's services aren't just for businesses. Cloud
Drive provides 20GBs of free storage and you can also use that storage to stream music to up to eight devices.
If you buy your music
from Amazon you can also store your music there without using any of your free storage. Unfortunately, to upload files you
must use a rather klutzy Flash interface.
amazon-storage--cloud
box storage-cloud
free storage cloud
devices supported by storage cloud
To both upload
and download music you'll need to use the Web-based Amazon Cloud Player. There's also an Android
Amazon cloud player.
If you want more storage,
and if you intend on using Amazon to store your music collection you will, Google offers several tiers of storage, ranging
from 20 to 1,000 gigabytes at a price of $1.00 per gigabyte. So, for instance, 20GBs will run you $20 per year.
Apple iCloud: iCloud comes with 5GBs of free storage. MobileMe customers receive 20GB of additional iCloud storage space for free,
if they pick it up by June 30, 2012. Like Amazon's Cloud Drive, it's actually more than just storage. Any music, apps, books,
and TV shows you purchase from the iTunes store, as well as your Photo Stream, don't count against your storage quota.
Apple's iCloud gives
you not just storage and an online music server, it also includes all of Apple's wireless services. These include contact
synchronization, its own e-mail service, mobile backup, and location awareness.
ICloud also works hand in glove with iTunes Match. Match, which is built into the iTunes app lets you store your entire music collection,
no matter its source in iCloud for just $24.99 a year. Music that's already in iTunes, even if you didn't buy it from Apple,
doesn't count against your storage limits.
Basic iCloud services are available via the Web on any platform. To really use it to its
full potential you need to be running a Mac with Lion or an iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch running iOS5. It also runs reasonably
well with Windows with the latest version of iTunes. What about your Mac running Snow Leopard or an older version of Mac OS
X? You're out of luck.
Additional space is priced at $20 per year for 10GB, $40 per year for 20GB, and $100 per year for 50GB.
Dropbox: Dropbox wasn't the first cloud-based storage service but it was
the one that popularized it. Unlike the other cloud systems, Dropbox doesn't need a Web-browser interface. It will run natively
on almost any PC, including
Linux or devices running Android
or iOS.
What
I really like about Dropbox is that I can use it just like it was any other network drive with my file manager.
Unlike the other services,
there are no extras. Dropbox offers file storage without any frills. On the other hand, sometimes that's all you need and
since it lets you easily get to your most important files no matter what device you're using I find it extremely handy.
Dropbox only comes with
2GBs of free storage, but since it's primary for documents and not media, that may be all you need. If you want more, Dropbox charges $9.99 a month for 50GBs and
$19.99 for 100GBs. Even with
the free additional storage, that makes it one of the more expensive services if you a lot of space.
Google
Play and Google Docs. OK, so we all want Google
to offer a "G drive."
So far, however, despite the endless rumors, they haven't come through with it. In the meantime, Google already offers a music
and e-book storage service. Unlike the other services though Google doesn't give you a fixed amount of storage space.
Instead, you can it
to store up to 20,000 songs. Google
provides a counter to let you
know how close you are to hitting your limit.
At an estimated 5MBs a song that works out to about 20GBs of storage.
Google Music feedback is available via a
Web browser on any PC and on Android devices with the Google Music App..
You can play Your Google Music tracks on any number of PCs and up to eight Android devices. However, you can only listen to
them on one device at a time. To upload music, you must use Google Music Manager. It's available on Linux, Mac, and Windows.
You can also buy music from the built-in Google Music Store
Google Docs includes a GB of free storage. Additional Google Docs storage is cheap. It starts at $5 a year for 20GBs of additional space.
Microsoft SkyDrive, like Google's offerings is a sort of, kind of, storage service.
True, it lets you save,
share and access files but you must use it through a browser, IE by choice but it will work with others. However, there are
rumors afoot that, like iCloud and Ubuntu One before it, Microsoft will integrate SkyDrive with its operating system. The
word is that SkyDrive will be
integrated into the Windows 8 file manager in the same way Dropbox already works with almost all operating system file managers.
Microsoft, however, is also trying to sell
it, together with Office Web Apps and local Microsoft Office software, as a project collaboration package. I find it a little klutzy myself. To really use it you pretty much have to be committed,
ala iCloud, to up to date Microsoft software. That said, the one thing you can't argue about is its price: SkyDrive comes
with 25GBs of free storage. That's far more than the others.
For Windows users, SkyDrive may soon be the cloud storage solution
of choice. It's just not quite there yet.
Ubuntu One: You might
think that this service would be for Ubuntu Linux users, or at least Linux users, only. You'd be wrong. This service, which
offers 5GBs of free storage and music streaming is also available on Windows.
Ubuntu One is also available on both Android and iOS.
I like Ubuntu One, but I've found that it has trouble running on Windows 7, but not XP,
at times. I've yet to pin down a hard reason for this.
The Ubuntu One music streaming service, which currently comes with 20GBs of storage, is
completely fee-based. It costs $3.99 a month or $39.99 a year. If you need more pure storage space for files and the like
over the initial 5GBs, it's $2.99 per month or $29.99 per year per 20GBs of storage.
So which is the best? I use all of them, but when it comes to the
bread and butter work of cloud file serving, I have to say Dropbox is still the best of the lot.
No, Dropbox doesn't have any bells or whistle.
No, it doesn't offer the most storage for the least amount of money. All it does is let me create, add, delete, move, copy,
edit, whatever, file and directories just as if they were any other files on my system. It doesn't matter if I'm using a Linux,
Mac, or Windows box or most smartphones or tablets; it just works with their native interfaces. That means I don't have to
think about how to use it, I can just use it. That makes it a winner in my book.
That said, with Apple, Microsoft and Canonical, Ubuntu's parent company, all integrating their cloud services right into the operating
system, Dropbox may be bettered by the year's end. And, of course, Google may yet change everything. Still, for now, Dropbox
is the best pure play personal cloud file storage. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
A comparison of FREE Cloud Storage
Services
Now that the biggest
tech companies in the world are taking aim at Dropbox (with Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon all offering their own cloud storage
services), we thought we would compare the FREE cloud storage plans that are out there, in terms of how much free storage
space they offer, how easy it is to get it raised, and how much you could get in total.
We also compare other pertinent factors that
could help you decide which one is best for you.
We tried to list all the “good” cloud storage services; however,
there were criteria for inclusion on our list, as well as criteria for exclusion (see below for more info on both).
Our list eventually
encompassed the following: , Dropbox, Skydrive, Amazon Cloud Drive, Google Drive , Sugarsync, Glide , CX (Cloud Experience),
Memopal, Safecopy, Mimedia, Teamdrive, HiDrive, Comodo Cloud Storage, Spideroak, MegaCloud, Wuala, and Synplicity.
Note:
this is a snapshot of the way things were as of our last update: May 1st,
2012. Things could have changed since. If you find an inaccuracy, please let us know in the comments or via
email.
How much free storage do I need?
Although the answer to this question is up
to you, this issue was explored in a previous post entitled “How much free cloud storage space do you really need?”, which posited that 7 gigs may be the magic number.
Inclusion criteria:
what the services have to offer to be on the list
A free plan: obviously
Desktop
folder sync: a desktop client that syncs a local folder or folders with the cloud. Services that offer this only
with a paid plan were excluded. This is also why most ‘file locker’ type services were excluded.
The Comparison
Sorting order:
the services on the list below are sorted in descending order according to the amount of maximum free storage attainable for
each.
Recommendations: if you want to know which services we like here at Freewaregenius, go to the ‘recommendations’ section below.
Links: go down to the links section for sign-up links. In most
cases you will get the initial extra referral bonus.
Cloud Service
Max File Size Upload [1]
Initial
Free Storage
Extra Free Storage Per
Friend
Max Storage Ceiling (including
max extra bonuses)
Supports Versioning
OS
Phone Apps
# of devices supported
Cloud Service
Max File Size Upload [1]
Initial
Free Storage
Extra Free Storage Per
Friend
Max Storage Ceiling (including
max extra bonuses)
Supports Versioning
OS
Phone Apps
# of devices supported
Idrive
500MB
5GB
1GB / referral.
10GB for sharing with your contacts list
50GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android
1
Sugarsync
2GB
5GB
500MB. A range of tasks will net you extra
storage as well.
32GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android
1
Glide
no limits
30GB
no referral program
30GB
Yes
Win, Mac, Linux
iOS, Android
6
Dropbox
2GB
2GB
500MB
16GB
Yes
Win, Mac, Linux
iOS, Android
unlimited
CX (Cloud Experience)
no limits
10GB
300MB
16GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android, Kindle Fire
unlimited
Memopal
5GB
3GB
500MB
13GB [2]
Yes
Win, Mac, Linux
iOS, Android, Blackberry
10
Safecopy [3]
5GB
3GB
500MB
13GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android
unlimited
Mimedia
3GB
7GB
1GB for each
5 (200MB / friend)
12GB
No
Win
iOS
99
Teamdrive
no limits
2GB
250MB
10GB
Yes
Win, Mac, Linux
iOS, Android
unlimited
HiDrive
2GB
5GB
5GB for each
10 friends (500MB / friend)
10GB
No (not on free plan at least)
Win, Mac
iOS, Android, WP7
1
Comodo Cloud Storage
2GB
5 GB
200MB
10GB
Yes
Win
iOS, Android
1
Spideroak
no limits
2GB
1GB
10GB
Yes
Win, Mac, Linux
iOS, Android
unlimited
MegaCloud
no limits
5GB
500MB
10GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android
1
Wuala
14GB
5GB
250MB
8GB
Yes
Win, Mac, Linux
iOS, Android
1 [6]
Skydrive
2GB
7GB
no referral program
7GB [4]
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, WP7
(3rd party Android Apps)
unlimited
Amazon Cloud Drive
2GB
5GB
no referral program
5GB [5]
We think
not [6]
Win, Mac
iOS, Android
8
Google Drive
2GB
5GB + 1GB Picasa storage
no referral program
5GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android
unlimited
Synplicity
no limits
2GB
1GB
5GB
Yes
Win, Mac
iOS, Android, Kindle Fire
2
[1] This will also depend on your browser or OS file size limits [2] We couldn’t find documentation for
this, but found it in practice [3] Safecopy seems to be a mere rebranded copy of Memopal, with a few minor differences
between the two, [4] Legacy accounts have 25 gigs free, and if you have a Hotmail or MSN account you may be able to get
25 gigs as well (see the recommendations section below) [5] It may be possible to get more if you’re
buying music off of Amazon (see here) [6] Not 100% sure about this. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Our recommendations:
We like SkyDrive, Dropbox,
iDrive, and Google Drive. But we also like many of the others.
We like Skydrive because you can get it installed
on multiple computers at once (on a single account), and you can likely still get the 25 gigs if you have a Hotmail or MSN
login, see this link and this article.
We like Dropoxbecause it is widespread, such that you will
NOT need to ask your friends and collaborators to sign up for something entirely new, since they will likely already have
a Dropbox account. It is also being widely used by developers who are creating cloud-related apps.
The current maximum free offering (16 gigs)
from Dropbox will is on the higher end of the table, and is probably sufficient for most people’s needs.
We like iDrivebecause
you can get up to 50 gigs of free space, at 1 gig increments per friend.
We like Google Drive because we use Gmail and
many other Google services.
But we are working on another post that compares these services more thoroughly, including their unique strengths
and weaknesses, beyond how much free space they offer. We would like your input. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++