GmailFS - The Google File System
Scott Granneman writes "Looking to use that new Gmail account for something really innovative? How about combining it with a brand new filesystem for Linux? Then GmailFS might be the answer: 'GmailFS provides a mountable Linux filesystem which uses your Gmail account as its storage medium. ... GmailFS supports most file operations such as read, write, open, close, stat, symlink, link, unlink, truncate and rename.'"
They're supporters of Linux. Somehow, it doesn't seem like a very "on the spoke" maneuver to aggravate them.
Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
-- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.
Ond now we'll put up a competing internet search service using GMail disk space !
Why do men climb mountains, why do they explore new lands, why do they explore space or the depths of the oceans. Mankind does it because it's there (or can be done).
This is really nice, but as i see it, there are two options: ;)
1) He gets his ass sued to hell
2) He gets a nice job at google
The system had the verbosity of HTML combined with all the readability of compiled assembly viewed as bitmap images
This could compliment a knoppix (or any liveCD) CD perfectly.
Prosperity is only an instrument to be used, not a deity to be worshipped. Calvin Coolidge
Somebody will do it... Doesn't mean it SHOULD be done. But still, does it accomodate the recent change in the login proceedure and possible future changes well?
@Whee
Do you hear those sirens? Because that is a COP OUT ANSWER!
Really. I'm curious, because if somebody is doing this, there's something wrong with the Windows and/or Linux filesystems. What's the matter?
Wheel in the sky keeps on turnin'.
Now google can target their adds at you even better.
Seriously, this is a joke, isn't it?
They're obviously setting themselves up to enter the OS/desktop market.
there are far more elegant ways to do network storage.
people are just blinded by that Gigabyte figure.
would you use a pop3 box to store your files? no.
would you go climbing the mount everest barefoot just because you can? no.
Exercise caution when modding this message up: the author acts like a jerk when his karma is excellent.
Yeah, that's sweet. "on the spoke" That's like "take one for the team" right?
Anyhow, this could be sweet in conjunction with a LiveCD. It's not like you'd be storing vast amounts of data using a LiveCD. You wouldn't clog their system with crap besides personal data and that's what its there for.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
No third-party e-mail checkers? Well, I hope Google allows downloading of mail. The big reason that e-mail checkers are needed for Hotmail/etc is that they make it difficult to download e-mail.
Gmail can allow up to 1GB storage based on the fact that not all email accounts are going to get anywhere near the limit, if GmailFS becomes real, Gmail would become unsustainable (and where is the Ad revenue?) and in summery Google will get very angry and pull the plug in a mean way. On another note, I'm surprised that having direct access to the root folders of a gmail account (like it's a pop/imap account) is even possible.
May be not as a traditional filesystem but to mount your mail account remotely. You could keep there some usefull files in order to move from place to place.
Of course this is interesting, and shows the talents and ideas that can occur in the world of free/open software.
But Google is a business and they do need to make money and this would be a surefire way for them to lose money (a load of their storage used up, no way to show their adverts, etc) so if anyone seriously used this I can imagine their account disabled.
What I want is google officially creating (or officially blessing the ones that already exist) a gmail notifier app for Mozilla. Technically, using the 3rd party ones that the Mozilla community develop are against their terms of service. They already do an official notifier but it's Windows only - a Mozilla based one would be cross platform.
my first thought was "this is stupid" but maybe it's handy when sharing semi-private files.
well, except for that occasional problem with Firefox on Linux-that is very accessible through their amazingly simple and (dare I say it?)helpful, help pages. In short-no.
The role of the writer is not to say what we can all say, but what we are unable to say. -Anais Nin
Interesting hack but I suspect it is soon to become just one thing in a long list of things that Google bans or doesn't allow.
If you bothered to read that thread, or actually used gmail yourself, you'd know that they aren't cracking down on third party addons (although they'd be in the rights to do so) - they're just adding captcha style logons in situations where an incorrect password has been entered too many times. It's simply to stop programs brute forcing gmail accounts.
An old adage that applies quite well even to the Internet age.
Gmail generates ad revenue, but abusing the account in this way both deprives Google of ad revenue as well and costs them network traffic and will likely increase their disk usage.
This is like that cool neighboor of yours that says you can borrow his tools and then you go over take everything you can find as well as set up a sign in your front lawn for others to join "the fun".
Goolgle won't leave this intact long and I don't blame them a bit.
I
This is great. If google's smart (and they are) they will encourage this and work out a way of benefitting from it.
Question for the kernel hackers: What is the status of FUSE or LUFS? Is there plans on standardising on one of these API's?
The status quo of not having a standardised userspace filesystem interface in the kernel is creating problems. (eg. the incompatible VFS/IOSLAVE hacks that should never have happened)
Not a usage that Google or the GmailFS designer had in mind for the service, I'll bet, but it wouldn't surprise me if somebody started doing this if the technique for using Google as free network storage became popular.
It's quite unlikely Google will embrace GmailFS because they're probably not counting on having a significant chunk of their users maxing out their 1GB storage. It's a neat hack, though.
Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
-- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.
Now this is hacking. An off the wall idea and dare I say it, something uniqu, turned inot reality.
Kids, look at this as an example of what sideways thinking can do. I love it - more because the true spirit of hacking is proven alive, rather than what it does.
Although, that's pretty cool too.
I am pretty sure this is the type of outside use that Google is against. Even so, it may be a useful technology to incorporate INTO Google, as a future Google service, or even to be provided by other services.
Imagine if Google was to provide some sort of remote filesystem storage for ANY OS, perhaps accessible via FTP or other protocol-over-HTTP. A searchable public filestore: not just what people keep in their websites, but the files that they keep... Intentionally made public, of course. The "technology" to do this exists in some forms already.
Yeesh, but then the various corporate execs would have fits because people were storing their favorite MP3s, DVD rips, TV shows, or whatever in their Google Public Share.
If it was not so abusive to FTP servers, I have thought more than once that an FTP search would be pretty cool. Let us say that you are looking for a specific filename that someone has in their anonymous FTP account. Punch it into Google, and blammo!
Anyway, it will be interesting to see what developes from this over the course of the next few years.
with some nice integrated encryption (saving a manual gpg step) for backup of small, important files.
One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
. . . but I have a feelng that fsck would take a long time were Gmail to die during a write :).
CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.
Can I boot my computer from my GMail account now?
Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
And I can already do that by emailing to myself the zip file of my day's work.
I'm a sci-fi vegan: I don't want the aliens to think we have as much right to live as the fried chickens we eat.
1. 10% of gmail users use linux.
2.Most linux users use firefox or mozilla
3.Many users use adblock extension on mozilla(i doubt this)
4.google ads dont reach users anyways(who clicks anyway)
5.Most ppl wont use GmailFs.(I have 80GB hd...why another slow 1 GB)
6.GmailFS is used by 0.1% of gmail users
7.Google doesnt care
8.Profit.................oops
DO no evil google , u will get geek support
and who cares if it does?
how about just buying a laptop if you want true portability?
Well it's nothing big really, but I noticed something with the screenshot of the Gmail account and teminal shell. Now, when you're logged into GMail, your space shows up as 1000MB, not 1 *true* gigabyte. However, in the terminal for the Google Filesystem, it shows up as 1024000 MB (1 *true* Gigabyte). Thought that I'd just point this out, as I said, nothing really that big but I noticed it...
Blank... right...
If you'd care to scroll down a screen, you'd see that it renders it fine.
If little apps that rest in your systray that check for gmail every minute or so annoy them (if they aren't made by g)
Gmail Cracks Down on Third-Party Notifiers
I'm sure they will be less than pleased with an app that has the potential to waste enormous (and excessive) amounts of bandwidth and disk space...
All the torrents you could want.
You are right! It is there! Someone forgot to move the "arbitrarily hide web page by starting it well below bottom margin" bug from Firefox!
I forgot to scroll, I admit it. I guess from years of using a working browser, I didn't think to hit the scroll bar just to SEE the page.
If you want google to paw through all your files and risk having your account yanked for violating the user agreement, feel free to use it... (heck, maybe google won't yank your account in return for the opportunity to index your files...)
Mail-based file systems are nothing new, nor are http-based file systems (or WebDAV, for that matter).
Disclaimer: I work for a company, but I don't speak for them.
Sure, it's got 1GB of storage, but so do a whole slew of other services now. Why not hammer Hotmail or Yahoo's servers and leave Google's alone? :)
I'm going to try to use this thing for backups of my config files. Its the perfect solution for that, can be automated in cron to do daily backups for example (unlike most web-based storage things)
Posted by a Debian GNU/Linux user
gmx.de offers one Gigabyte of storage for your mail and files. You can access it with konqueror via webdavs://mediacenter.gmx.de/ and you have your encrypted connection to your remote files. An all for free! For a few bucks you get a whole 10 GB of storage. Wohoo!
GMX has been offering 1 GB of storage for email and files for free for some time now.
.
;p
Expand this to 5 GB for 3 EUR / month or 10 GB for 5 EUR / month.
You can also share your uploaded files with other GMX members, and mount your GMX account as a network drive using a WebDAV client (they provide a pre-configured Windows client but you may use another one)
By the way, their e-mail features totally 0wn any other e-mail service: automated e-mail retrieval from all your other POP-enabled mailboxes, custom filters for automatic redirection, SMS/MMS alerts, up to 15 aliases...
I knew all that time spent learning German at school would come in handy some day!
When you reach more than 100MB of 'your' storage space, Gmail contacts you and asks to remove some data, even if (in our case) it were legitimate hi-res surface-scans of metal structures, entirely educational.
I confess that I assumed they would do something like that. 1GB per quasi-anonymous, non-profit user is too ridiculous for them to keep it up.
Is this already blocked? I tried it out, this is what I got: File "/usr/lib/python2.3/urllib2.py", line 412, in http_error_default raise HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code, msg, hdrs, fp) urllib2.HTTPError: HTTP Error 502: Bad Gateway
Posted by a Debian GNU/Linux user
There is a Google FS:
5 -g hemawat.pdf
http://www.cs.rochester.edu/sosp2003/papers/p12
Hivemind harvest in progress..
RIA raids Google's storage room...
This is my sig. There are thousands more, but this one is mine.
"it were legitimate hi-res surface-scans of metal structures, entirely educational."
That's a nice way to describe robot pr0n, Bender. Way to go!
Big systems need ways to limit abuse, otherwise a single user with a broken perl (or python) script will take down the entire service.
Gmailfs works by sending an email EVERY TIME a file is updated! (from my understanding at least) I predict that users of gmailfs will soon start bitching about their accounts getting shut down after they send a few thousand emails.
I'm sure they'll pull the plug on this, obviouslly, why shoot yourself in the leg? Gmail's policy states: Modify, adapt, translate, or reverse engineer any portion of the Gmail Service under Prohibited Actions on this pagE: Policies Cool concept though - I almost want to try it but I dont want my account to be revoked.
I wonder how long it will be until Google becomes an instant messaging service, an ISP, an IRC server, et cetera. Is it good for Google to introduce all of these new features? It is going to take more work to create and maintain these new Google enhancements as they are created.
That kind of thing would be much better as a live-query-enabled fs for BeOS/Zeta.
I'm sure a standard ImapFS would have been possible in the past, but not very cool. Now comes Google, and bam, you have it. Another proof that free software usually starts as a personal hack or just for fun to grow into something useful for everybody.
Theres lots of things wrong with the filesystems availible for Windows and Linux, I'm sure. But even if that was a reason for this, this doesn't fix it. (Since it's just a Unix like FS that happens to use GMail as the storage device as opposed to a physical drive). I'm sure the coder didn't say to himself, "You know what's wrong with file-systems today? They aren't implemented as a slow screen-scrapping interface to webmail!". It was probably more along the lines of "Crap, I only have enough HDD space left for some Python scripts and FUSE...hmm GMail gives me a gig..."
Why not fork?
Not necessarily. FTP has a "README" that always appears when you enter a directory, so something like this could be added.
Alternately, ads may be encoded into the file system as the following example shows:
-rwr--r-- 1 google google 2384 Aug 28 01:25 [AD] If you want low low prices at fast convenient service, come to QuickMart. View file for more information.
-rwr--r-- 1 google google 2384 Aug 28 01:25 [AD] Slashdot is your friend. View file for more information.
-rw------- 1 ac ac 3723 Aug 28 02:39 Stuff.pdf
-rw------- 1 ac ac 2342 Aug 28 05:15 Mail1.eml
Do you know of any traffic limits once you start sharing those 10 GB of data with a lot of "good friends"?
Offtopic: He has 6 gmail invites...can I be his friend.
" They've already made it plain they don't want third-party email account checkers; now you're going to subject them to transient file storage addons?"
Good thing they're not an evil company, LOL. the only problem i see here is getting to rely on this system then having Google get pissy again (some would say... "evil") and find yourself locked out from critical easy access to your files.
On that note, why is this horribly abusive of Google? They're the ones giving you the massive amount of free space with virtually unlimited attatchment sizes. It's online storage and danged if this program doesn't use it for exactly that. I'm failing to see the huge, critical difference between sending email back and forth between huge online storage containers and simply using the online storage container for what it is via Linux.
No, it's all control, and it's about time people relaized that Google is just as "evil" as every other company when it comes to that and their company/stock profits. Between crap like this and that stock stunt, that self-claimed good guy image didn't last very long, did it?
You need a FREE iPod Nano
Don't mount it setuid
http://michaelsmith.id.au
with so many free ftp account available, apart from the Gcoolness why should you use it instead?
no, IE is probably the buggy one. it compensates for IDIOTIC web designer mistakes, like a double in the html page which creates the huge row. this is your culprit: and not mozilla.
I'm halfway wondering if there is a good way to combine this with floating data storage in such a way that we could claim 3 GB of data on the GMFS. The main downside that I can see if the likelihood of severe delays in getting the data back when you want it. But hey, we have FDS (Floating Data System), and GMFS (GMail File System)... Why Not FDGMFS (Um, yeah)? Like I said before, it probably COULD be done. Doesn't mean that it SHOULD be done. But it won't stop somebody from trying. (Heads off to try.)
@Whee
Why would Google care about something like this in the first place? Storage is Storage. ...Unless they didn't actually want/expect people to use that gig of space. Kinda like old Simplenet-- It's unlimited webspace in name only; A marketing tool and nothing more.
Mmmmmm, I'm feeling all that good Google karma.
You need a FREE iPod Nano
(i guess i should have selected "plain old text")
no, IE is probably the buggy one. it compensates for IDIOTIC web designer mistakes, like a double in the html page which creates the huge row. this is your culprit:
<TR HEIGHT="676" CELLPADDING="0" ALIGN="TOP" WIDTH="820">
and not mozilla.
IE only is the *last* think Google would do.
Only big ligs use sigs.
One can create a crosscrypt container file so one can have transparent encryption.
You are right: it really does not work with FF.
Sad that even such a minimalistic page can not be rendered correctly in a browser that tries to be standards conform.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Cool! Now Google can sell ads based on the contents of my files! :-(
/.ers highly strange? Where are the rants about GMail's privacy issues -- especially when there are other free services which offer as much or more disk space and which don't have any privacy issues?!
Is it just me, or is the GMail cheerleading by normally-privacy-concerned
It has to be about Google to be newsworthy, hasn't it? GMX, a German webmail provider, offers free 1GB mail accounts which are accessible by web, POP3 and WebDAV. You can also share your files with other GMX users. Transfer volume is limited to twice the storage amount per month.
Why not? If google teamed up on a little joint venture with a well devleoped Linux distrobution, I could see deeper desktop penetration of Linux just because of the Google brandname.
It's wishful thinking, I know. But when it comes to penetration, I'd rather it be done with a partener I know and trust, than some entity which is already working the corners and has been known to spread the odd 'virus' ;)
Hopefully someday this will be a slashdot header.
AskSlashdot: Why can we not fix the friggin linux NTFS support?
Keep bringing it up, maybe someone will notice.
Offtopic? Not when people are using email for damn storage.
-- I have fans? Wow.
I was just trolling.
But I do think they won't be able to handle a massive percentage of users with maxed-out or at least substantial usage of storage, and once Gmail is officially launched, automatic registrations/uploads/downloads will peak very early, using botnets like this.
If I had 2 accts can I have RAID-0 for faster access? :)
Because then, if your o/s fucks up, you can blame a email provider!....
Wait no....
I KNOW! Because, then you can basicly MOVE you machine from one place to another (especially easy if your hardware is exactly the same).
This reminds me of that ask slashdot, where some guy mentioned that we would no longer have our own PC O/S on our pc, but have it all hosted somewhere, meaning we could "log on" any pc and use our files, our set ups etc etc.
Nice idea but first its got to work!.
- http://www.milkme.co.uk
Backups can be automated, including the encryption. Use "gpg -r [your id] --encrypt-files [files]" to encrypt your files. GPG will not ask for a password, because it is using your public key to encrypt. You will however need your password for your private key in order to decrypt them.
Or, if you want a live encrypted filesystem, try encfs (a pass-through filesystem which is also FUSE based, see http://freshmeat.net/projects/encfs/). Although I haven't tried chaining them, you can probably mount encfs on top of gmailfs and have encrypted data stored in gmail..
There has been no change in the login procedure. If one types one's password in wrong several times in a row, GMail enforces an image recognition component to prevent brute force cracking of passwords.
My username does not make me Apathetic. It's irony, get it?
Take a look at the HTML - There's a table, with the first row having height 676, then ... the beginning of ANOTHER row, not the contents of that row like there should be. Everything BESIDES IE is correctly rendering the empty 676px tall row.
A quick run through a HTML validator might benifit the page's author.
Why do men climb mountains, why do they explore new lands, why do they explore space or the depths of the oceans. Mankind does it because it's there (or can be done).
I thought that was done for women....
there's something wrong with the Windows and/or Linux filesystems.
What exactly are you refering to with Linux filesystems? Linux has many different choices of file systems to choose from and each has advantages and disadvantages.
As far as I know, none of the existing filesystems for Linux can mount your Gmail storage space so I'd say you missed the entire point of the story headline and the article itself.
Or maybe I did..
Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
Nope, cant. He is virtualizing a space, but he only access the account as normal http. Worse: even he strip the feature from html, not optimized xml api queries :(
-Woof woof woof!
It looks to me as if a few people here decided to take the Third Part Checker article to be the absolute, unbending truth, and didn't bother to check around to make sure it was.
They've already made it plain they don't want third-party email account checkers
Could someone please show me where Google made it clear they specifically don't want 3rd party email account checkers? Did they announce this and I've missed it? Certainly a slashdot story yesterday claimed Google doesn't want them. Except for the person who submited the story, I have not seen any other proof to back this claim up.
First, I saw no other accounts of this happening to other people in any of the threads. I did read quite a few threads that said they had no such problem. GTray continues to work for me.
Second, assume this does happen, maybe its not intended to specifically block 3rd party apps. Perhaps its a side effect of them checking too frequently. It is known that the word verification check comes up after entering the wrong password about 5 times. Are these people using the wrong password?
Perhaps, Google doesn't like the way the 3rd party apps are interfacing with their system. Obviously, gmail's beta check has its own method to get email, it is likely more effcient than pulling down the html with each check. If this is the case, it may just be a matter of time before they give the specs on how they would prefer it done.
Anyway, my point is just because a word verification scheme is popping up for some users doesn't mean it is an attack on 3rd party apps like slashdot seems to say it is. There are many other possiblitites. Ever since Google announced it was going public, it's almost like people expect google to start going bad.
Why not just use GMX (http://www.gmx.net/)? They don't have searchable email, but 1GB for every user (free account) and up to 5GB if you purchase a pro account.
The clou: Storage is for both email and their mediacenter data storage which can be accessed using webdav. So there you go. 1GB of FREE storage that is INTENDED to be used as storage and can easily be mounted/added to your favorite desktop.
The catch: The interface is in German only.
for a second there I thought the RIAA raided Google's storage room.
Technically Speaking GMail is still in Beta anyone who uses GMail is therefore a Beta tester. Whether or not Google decide to allow or reject this as abuse remains to be seen. Whatever the case this guy is providing google with valuable beta-test feedback. Something they may have overlooked that needs to be fixed, or something they overlooked that needs to be improved.
Either way it just depends which way you look at it...
Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
How the fuck would they use the DMCA?
Why the fuck would they use the DMCA?
Watch this Heartland Institute video
$ ls -l /boot/grub/
insgesamt 154
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 108 2004-08-29 14:50 device.map
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 7776 2004-08-29 14:50 e2fs_stage1_5
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 8320 2004-08-29 14:50 jfs_stage1_5
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 493 2004-08-29 15:30 menu.lst
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 463 2004-08-29 15:30 menu.lst~
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 7008 2004-08-29 14:50 minix_stage1_5
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 9216 2004-08-29 14:50 reiserfs_stage1_5
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 1024 2004-08-29 14:23 splashimages
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 512 2004-08-29 14:50 stage1
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 107368 2004-08-29 14:50 stage2
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 9256 2004-08-29 14:50 xfs_stage1_5
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 893273 2004-08-29 14:50 gmail_stage1_5
Cool! Grub supports it already. The Question ist now, how to get stage1 booted. Would need Bios-Support for MBR on GMAIL..
A server centric model for mass computing sound more for IBM. Either direct to users or as the middleman.
You could suggest that it would be the ultimite branding of the 'computer experience' a super portal.
Instead of Linux vs BSD vs Windows it would be
GoogleAnywhere vs YahooOS vs MSWorldComputer.
For the public sell it for ease of use and for security.
For merchants advertise for encouragement of
software subscription and easier implimentation of DRM.
In the begining, computers were big monsters with lots of terminals attached. Later, when technology was cheaper and computers smaller, we had a computer for person. And now... are we re-inventing the old terminals again? :)
Oh rats! Nobody gave me a "Funny" :)
Online backup with Mozy, sounds like Ozzie, but more!
AskSlashdot: Why can we not fix the friggin linux NTFS support?
The developers of free filesystem drivers will fix the NTFS driver as soon as you provide complete and correct documentation covering how to write to NTFS safely.
Instead of using it for general files, why not use it for swap?
Google made many statements on why they have so much space. And it wasn't storage. It was so that users had one email address for practically their whole lifetime, and wouldn't ever have to lose the data from their emails. This makes me believe they have planned that most users would use only a small part of their email storage at first, and after that, well, storage gets cheaper with time, so by the time people actually use half a gig or a gig, it probably costs 10 times less, according to their plan :).
I pwn this comment. "The Fine Print" says so.
I'm not a google groupie but... Google is a big company, if you sign up for gmail, chances are 2 years from now gmail will still be there and will be operating with reasonable quality, just like Yahoo and hotmail. Other smaller or less known companies can offer 4GB mail accounts and it still won't be the same: there is no guarantee that they'll be around in a year or that the level of service won't drop... and changing email addresses is a pain.
I think people are missing the big question here. What kind of read and write performance does this thing have?
As much as I am usually against frivolous lawsuits, this time I hope Google will sue and win. Why? Because this so called "file system" is a classical example of parasite which can only hurt Google giving absolutely nothing in exchange whatsoever. And for what? So its "developers" could have their project posted on Slashdot frontpage? So they could say "look, mom, how 'leet' I am"? I ask you, people, what if one day someone writes a "file system" stealing storage from Slashdot, saving its files in the form of gigabyte first posts filled with goat.se links and literally tons of uuencoded pornography? This is exactly the same, only much worse, because Google has much less intrusive advertisements and no corporate agenda. From every greedy US corporation, Google is unquestionably the closest to being absolutely perfect. And how do we say "thank you"? By stealing their property? By advertising this pathetic thief "file system" on the front page of the most popular website on the north hemisphere? I just wanted to protest and clearly state that I am strongly against it. I hope someone will start a paypal fund to help Google in court. We cannot tolerate such a behaviour. Please keep in mind that Google is not another Microsoft or Caldera. Google is trying to do what is best for us. They deserve our gratefulness and, what is even more important, respect. The existence of script kiddies shamefully exploiting Google's superior services for their own miserable advantage is a precedence not only insulting to our intelligence but a one actually harmful for us in the long run, because that could possibly mean the end of fantastic projects from Google, when they eventually stop to think and inevitably say: "Hey, why give them so much if they just want to steal from us? Maybe that popup pornography ads and paid search results placement weren't such a bad idea, after all?" I know I certainly would.
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
Except for offline backup (which you could already manually use GMail for) this is not very useful. Even for that it isn't really useful since Google could cancel you account if they don't like how you use it.
This is really just expression of "I could do it".
Even so, if they used the gimick of 1 G of email for marketing but expected nobody to use it, tough, they don't get to completely control how you use their product.
As far as the XM-PCR, this is just the like a VCR for XM radio. How is this an abuse? The recording is analog, all the program does is allow a time shift. These are all things that anybody could do manually for a long time. Should we take away VCRs and Tivo just because broadcasters would prefer we had to watch TV under their rules?
You already have the capacity but not the right to sell or distribute most of the content that XM transmits.
They did not go "out of their way". They did it to sell more subscriptions.
This program actually makes XM radio more marketable.
When you create a product, you do not get to regulate every thing your customers do with it. Soon we will have Kellogs telling us that we cannot make our own rice krispie bars (i.e. we have to buy their Rice Krispie Treats) with the box of cereal we bought as this violates the "license".
Because of NialScorva's Law, derived from Godwin's law.
NialScorva's Law:
Given enough time, all legal battles in the tech industry will invoke the DMCA.
But you're right. Not insightful.
Nouvelles de jeux et technologies en français. TC
you've got to be one classy retard not to understand that the invite only thing is because their still testing it out.
Looks like I pissed off the cretin who gave it insightful, he thinks my post was "flamebait".
Of course it can't of been very good flamebait as the replies haven't been flames.
Watch this Heartland Institute video
besides GmailFS performance is at least 10x better than NTFS!
gmailfs, will it ever end :/
..i think im going to devlop a script that will pull names from gmail databanks via google.com to come up with the names of my future child(ren)
/end rant
google this, google that, google here, google there..
google google everywhere!
now THAT is truely adopting google..
WikiFS the new filing system for linux.
Uses a redundant array of wikies found on the internet using internet searches for 'wiki'.
The available storage is limited only by the number of wikis found on the internet.
Thee filing system gards against deletion by redundantly storing data accross multiple wiki sites.
GMX is THE German webmail provider and has been around for more than 6 years (about half a year longer than Google).
comments are encrypted and written using dictionary words to avoid the lameness filter.
I implemented the prototype of this system many years ago using an encoding system called First-Post. I simply use different permuations of the words first-post (FP!, Frist psot!, etc...) along with various dummy account names to encode 1 Kilobyte of information. I run the whole thing off ny Newton.
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
Television channels run ads as a way to pay for costs. Now, if you were to say something like
"Don't mute the TV when the ads are on, that's STEALING!", "AGAINST CAPITALISM" or "IMMORAL", we'd rightly laugh at you.
Same thing with anything on the net, they can display ads 24/7 at every mouse click, but I reserve the right to block/mute/close/ignore them.
Even google's non-obstrusive ads annoy people.
Crying about people ignoring advertisements is beyond pathetic.
People do it. Scripts exist....
Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
I'm curious, because if somebody is doing this, there's something wrong with the Windows and/or Linux filesystems. What's the matter?
:)
You're right, it's exactly that, Linux was missing a really slow FS, thus this. Windows already has two of them, so no problems there
It isn't storage--its the massive number of data transfers a second. If you use Gmail as a file system, you're interacting with Gmail as you would with a hard drive. And that means you're using not just bandwidth, but server power. And if a few ten thousand /.ers did this, Google would have to add hundreds of extra servers--yet they would earn nothing off ads to pay for what normally would support millions of email users.
If you want crypt you can use a loopback crypt
l es ystem-HOWTO.html#toc3
on your GmailFS parition.
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Loopback-Encrypted-Fi
Is the interface as elegant and user friendly?
To WinFS. They forgot this, so they have to go back and add it. :)
GMX is a great free e-mail service IMO. My main e-mail account is hosted there since few years ago.
Nowadays, unfortunately, GMX offers their service in German language only... So its public is restricted.
Yes. In fact WebDAV is a standard, so it's available on and integrated into many other operating systems as well. We are still talking about the filesystem, right?
(In case you're where alluding to the webmail part: I guess I'm old fashioned, but I like "classic" webmail interfaces better than Google's search-or-else style. I like my email sorted into folders, thank you very much.)
...and we DON'T like MS or AOL. Watching MS and AOL gets screwed with and/or fail gives slashdotters wood.
:P
Conversely, Google is useful and cool and pretty much none of the things that MS or AOL are. Geeks are favorably disposed to Google because Google hasn't done anything abysmally STUPID.
Yet, anyway.
The GmailFS is a cute little technological achievement, but it's not what Gmail is for and I'm afraid that if any significant number of people use GmailFS that Gmail is going to suffer TOS adjustments that will affect everyone.
You are contradicting yourself by putting true, the word inside these: **. Is this supposed to mean that you believe that *true* is actually true or that you don't really think of 1000MB as a true GB but rather as a false GB but for the sake of all the wrong ComSci definitions you still have to call it true even though in quotes, which shows how confused you are?
Ok, so that sounded like a flame, however considering the old SI standard all of these prefixes - nano, micro, milli, kilo, mega, giga, tera etc.- are base 10 and not powers of 2, so instead of calling something a *true*, (which means false) Gb, let's call it 2^10 for a false Kb, 2^20 for a false Mb, 2^30 for a false Gb etc.
You can't handle the truth.
lameness:
will start a paypal fund to help Google in court. We cannot tolerate such a behaviour. Please keep in mind that Google is not another Microsoft or Caldera. Google is trying to do what is best for us. They deserve our gratefulness and, what is even more important, respect. The existence of script kiddies shamefully exploiting Google's superior services for their own miserable advantage is a precedence not
Between crap like this and that stock stunt, that self-claimed good guy image didn't last very long, did it?
between crap like what? giving out free space? What have they done? They haven't shut GmailFS down, they haven't deleted accounts.
Wait, they did give out 1Gb accounts, those bastards! I can sure see why that kills the good-guy image.
This sig is definitive. Reality is frequently inaccurate.
as it offers pop3 access the interface is as elegant and userfriendly as your mail client
you can use anything from mutt to outlook and even store your mail locally (for backup, reference, or whatnot) which is afaik not possible with gmail
-- Karma: beyond good and evil - mostly affected by posting political
I'll bite
booyakkajoeNOSPAM@MAPSONhotmail.com
This is where I keep my clever quotes "" Yup I only got a pair, so I better not waste em!
if you need a gmail account, i have 5 invites. email me at fiveyearplan(at)email.com for one.. first come, first served. will.
There are enough open servers out there. So there's really no reason for them to bother setting this up (which takes some knowledge), especially since there's no storage limit on open servers. And probably even more importantly, because sharing the login and password allows anyone to not just download but also to delete any files on that gmailfs 'device'.
On point that I haven't seen anyone bring up yet is that Google's probably counting on most average users to send and receive mostly non-binary emails. Text usually compresses really well. That's often not true for non-text, ie. binaries.
Provided the folks at Gmail use compression (I assume they do), they may not be planning to actually provide 1 GB per user.
You're wasting your time talking about what people should and shouldn't do with GMail. Until Google makes it impossible to do or devises negative consequences for doing it, it's fair game.
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
...And Lovin' it :D
A+++ util
(...files are accessible as attachments - I no longer need to open a browser or mail client to send stuff to myself at work :)
First 5 to post their email addresses get gmail invites!
Wow, that is amazingly innovative. At least, it was when it shipped in Exchange 2000.
Some random Wiki user decided your files weren't good enough and took the liberty of editing them for you.
If you wanted to use GmailFS to backup small files, (as a few users above have suggested) why not just email those files to yourself? Sure you cannot automate it, and retrieving the files isn't as convenient as 'cp', but it's within the Gmail TOS and it does exactly what you want, stores a backup of your file on a remote machine. Why abuse Gmail when they already offer this?
I like my email sorted into folders, thank you very much.
Labels work exactly the same way, except you don't have to choose one folder where two might both apply - you can label it with both.
Most of which, IMO, aren't as elegant and userfriendly as Gmail.
I can definitely see universally accessible data being a big part of the internet in the future (5 to 10 years out), especially if quantum storage solutions are developed. Ultimately users will be able to take any computer and have access to all of their data, programs, and the rest.
Looks like everybody but Microsoft is getting out alpha releases of WinFS these days... .
Is that you, Search King?
"1. 10% of gmail users use linux."
errr, right, sure.
73.8% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
heh, as zeitgeist states, linux users account on google for a massive 1%!
wow, looks like linux is expanding!
They're not quotes. They're asterisks, which are used 'round these parts for emphasis, not for emulating quotes. The asterisks, much like the words emphasized like -this-, are meant to simulate the effect a bold or italic typeface without the hassle of using HTML.
When I open the Trash Can / Recycle Bin / whatever they call it, I'll be greeted with the following:
No conversations in the trash. Who needs to delete when you have 1000 GB of HD storage?
AskSlashdot: Why can we not fix the friggin linux NTFS support?
There's no need for an Ask Slashdot about it as everyone else already knows the reason. It's just you that doesn't. That's why we point and laugh at you when your back's turned.
Thank you. Sometimes the truth just have to be said, notwithstanding the consequences. Thank you very much for your support.
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
booyakkajoe@hotmail.com
eandry@amphora.wincom.net
mm22@mail.com
So we can have 1gb of storage on another computer? What a great place to store stuff you don't want to lose. Not that i don't think google will be banning people quite swifly for using this...
but it's perfectly useable. wanna give me 1gb of your harddrive space? i promise i'll find a use.
If you want a rock solid FS without the chance of losing your data why not create a Usenet FS that functions similar to this? If all of the files were encrypted, UU Encoded then encrypted again using strong encryption it should be safe enough for your data to be out in the wild. Think this could work?
Anthony Papillion
Advanced Data Concepts, Inc.
"Quality Custom Software and IT Services"
Thank you, you are confirming exactly what I said. It's sad that some people see things like this as "fair game." GmailFS is an abuse of a free service being provided by Gmail for an entirely different purpose. It's like the old "freakers" that used Black Boxes to get free calls on the long distance network decades ago. Yes, they could do it, but should they?
Even so, it's one thing for AT&T to have an adequate security system in place--but in the case of GmailFS we're not talking about Google having inadequate security in place. We're talking about Google lacking anti-abuse algorithms in place. It's sad that it's not the script kiddies that are going to force Google to have to put limits on their service, but their "friends" in the geek community.
Part of being part of technology isn't just doing everything you can do but doing only those things we should do. Google has generally been well-received in the geek/Linux community. Are we go to say "thanks" by abusing the free service they are providing?
WE'LL INTEGRATE THE WEB BROWSER INTO THE OS AND FORCE THE USER TO UPDATE THE SYSTEM THROUGH THE BROWSER SO THEY HAVE TO HAVE OUR BROWSER OR SUCK.
Yes, it's a Microsoft example, but I'd consider something like that to be evil AND stupid. Google, imo, hasn't done anything befitting either category.
Phreaking is a very important part of computing history. Also don't forget that Apple Computers was partially found with money made on manufacture of blue boxes.
It's sad that it's not the script kiddies that are going to force Google to have to put limits on their service, but their "friends" in the geek community.
Considering the inherent performance limitations of GmailFS, I don't suppose its use will become widespread. It's a neat tool to have when needed, though.
Part of being part of technology isn't just doing everything you can do but doing only those things we should do.
Who decides this part?
Nice concept, but I think it's so useless for anything practial (because of the high potential for account=data loss) that the author would have wasted less time writing a paper rather than implementing it. But that would not have made /. - ah, the things we do for fame.
Must-not-watch TV!
And they manage to get ads crop like files in your directory.
They could do it in half an hour, probably...
I'm in Canada and have used a @gmx.de address for some time now.. it's great for a free pop3 account (if you can read/navigate a german site), except they send spam quite often, stupid unneccesary "newsletters" and so on...
;)
I wouldn't be surprised if there was some way to opt out of these newsletters but I don't know German that well
Anyways yup, GMX works great. I'm kind of glad it's not as popular though. I mean, Yahoo used to have POP3 access back when they weren't as well known, and well, they eventually removed it (most people don't even realize Yahoo used to allow POP3 access)... I wouldn't want that to happen to GMX as well.
I'm replying to you here, out from the journals, but man, I'm glad you're back. :)
Glad to be back! :-) Thanks!