Online Storage 2.0: Six Sites Reviewed
mikemuch writes "Services like box.net, openomy, and eSnips are more than just places to access your files from the web. Some include media organization tools, Windows shell integration, drag-and-drop uploading, tagging, and social content sharing. ExtremeTech has a review up of six online storage services with Web 2.0 twists."
They give you 5 Gig free. It's owned by AOL, but there don't seem to be any realy limitations placed on the user.
Now isn't this link much better?. Why is it so difficult to submit these links instead? Sigh...
I've got 224 GB of storage space and 2.6 TB of monthly bandwidth, along with an image gallery, blog, SSH and FTP access, and email with spam filtering for $9.99/month + $10/year for the domain name.
I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
For those willing to forgo drag-and-drop interfaces, the shared hosting account is a much better storage deal for the buck. The better companies will provide in excess of 100GB for $5-8 per month with regular off-site backups. Oh, and you get web hosting too.
In contrast, the consumer market companies in the article generally charge the same amount for an order of magnitude less storage. Maybe there's less competition for consumer storage, or higher marketing costs? Regardless, the discrepancy looks like a market imbalance that can't continue for long.
How about http://www.rsync.net/?
I have no affiliation with them, and I've never used their service, but it sounds like what you asked for.
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 Whoops, silly middle mouse button...
Then create a cert using CACert, provide instructions for users to import their root cert, and get on the bandwagon of people shouting for Mozilla to finally add them to the default list.
Or publish your own root cert for users to import.
There are solutions out there...
I've been using s3sync to upload/download stuff to Amazon's S3 service for months. It works great. I even use it on Windows (since it's a ruby program, it works anywhere).
There are many graphical managers as well, I use jetS3t, which is a java based gui client.
The huge added bonus (for me) is that with S3 it's trivial to make something public (with or without authentication), or even have it host a torrent.