Slashdot Mirror


Google Drive Launching Next Week With 5GB Free Space

An anonymous reader writes "The Next Web is reporting that Google Drive, the search giant's long anticipated cloud storage service, is set to launch next week. From the article: 'What's interesting though is that Google is planning to start everyone with 5 GB of storage. Of course you can buy more, but that trumps Dropbox's 2 GB that is included with every account. Dropbox does make it easy to get more space, including 23 GB of potential upgrades for HTC users. What's also interesting is the wording related to how the system will work. It's been long-thought that Windows integration will come easy, but that getting the Google Drive icon into the Mac a la Dropbox would be a bit harder. From what we're reading, Google Drive will work "in desktop folders" on both Mac and Windows machines, which still leaves the operation question unanswered.'"

265 comments

  1. Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are two large, very real problems with Google Drive. For starters Google has a long history of abandoning projects after they fail to gain users on them. This would be a huge problem with cloud storage like Google Drive.

    I also fail to see why this would get any good amount of users even if Google did advertise it correctly - unlike their search engine, gmail and youtube, cloud storage is nothing new. There are tons of companies offering their services with ridiculously low profit margins. Hell, most of them are free for home users, and I really wouldn't trust Google with my company or work data - I would use a professional hosting service with SLA and company that has no need to mine my data.

    Lastly, but even more so importantly, putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid. They already know so much - hell, they track Slashdot too. On top of that Google has serious problem with anti-competition regulators and this is just going to make those issues worse when Dropbox and other companies will demand Google to stop leveraging their search engine against them. They already have this problem in other markets.

    1. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >> unlike their search engine, gmail and youtube, cloud storage is nothing new.

      Because email was a new phenomenon when Gmail launched?

    2. Re:Google Drive by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I also fail to see why this would get any good amount of users even if Google did advertise it correctly - unlike their search engine, gmail and youtube, cloud storage is nothing new. There are tons of companies offering their services with ridiculously low profit margins. Hell, most of them are free for home users, and I really wouldn't trust Google with my company or work data [...] Lastly, but even more so importantly, putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid. They

      Yeah, and for the same reasons their e-mail service never caught on.

      --
      My first program:

      Hell Segmentation fault

    3. Re:Google Drive by pushing-robot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's probably targeting Apple's iCloud. It's nice to be able to tell developers "Here's a place to store data. It will automatically be backed up and synchronized between the user's devices. You won't have to run your own servers and get the user to trust you with their data. You won't even have to ask the user for special credentials or get them to sign up for Dropbox or anything like that. It just works."

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    4. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Gmail was done remarkably better and offered much larger storage than their competitors. Yet, Gmail still didn't win Hotmail or Yahoo which to date are the two largest email providers on planet.

      However, it doesn't seem like this is the case with Google Drive. It actually looks like they don't bring anything new or innovative to the table either, and in fact, might have a worse service than Dropbox and other companies have (not even having good software for OS X or Linux). They also don't offer that much more space either.

      The cloud storage landscape and internet in 2012 is vastly different from email and Gmail when it launched.

    5. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It just works if the customer in question already has a Gdrive account.

    6. Re:Google Drive by pushing-robot · · Score: 2

      I'd imagine Google Drive would be tied to Google accounts, and it's safe to assume most Android users will have Google accounts.

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    7. Re:Google Drive by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Google isn't a charity. Giving away free storage doesn't make money in and of itself. Will they charge for more space? Show ads? Read your docs and blackmail you?

      (And yes, the same point is true for dropbox et alia).

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    8. Re:Google Drive by icebraining · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Lastly, but even more so importantly, putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid.

      The advantage of a dumb data store is that you can layer some encryption transparently. Even something simple like putting a password on a RAR file is enough to prevent such snooping.

      That said, I probably wouldn't use it for anything important anyway.

    9. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Email is not storage. Users don't want a new email address. That's why hotmail and yahoo still exist at all.

    10. Re:Google Drive by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The attraction of cloud storage for end users is integration with other services - think iCloud. Google already has cloud storage for music, which is pretty neat because you can stream directly from it on any Android device (and optionally precache some files locally, while still having auto-sync etc). They also have a separate cloud storage for photos - PicasaWeb - also integrated with Android gallery, as well as G+. Then there are Google Docs. Perhaps they figured that it's long overdue for them to aggregate all those services together in a single solution, like Apple did with iCloud.

    11. Re:Google Drive by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      Google has a long history of abandoning projects after they fail to gain users on them...
      Or simply deciding to allocate resources elsewhere when ( Squirrel! ) some other technology looks more interesting to some 20-something with the title of "Manager"

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    12. Re:Google Drive by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Truecrypt. It's not completely secure since they probably have copies of your container elsewhere they can use to do a bitwise comparison against. But it's more work for them to decrypt than plaintext, and practically necessitates a determined attacker.

      Assuming they don't already securely encrypt your data during transit and in storage.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    13. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 1

      Since Google Music was just recently launched, why didn't they do it with Google Drive to begin with? Same is true for Picasa, or now Google+. Seems they are just separating their services. On top of that Google sucks at building brand names which is also visible from their use of subdomains for different products. drive.google.com looks a lot more serious than something like dropbox.com. They would probably have youtube under youtube.google.com if it wasn't for the fact that they bought the whole website from other company and it had already built it's name by then.

    14. Re:Google Drive by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are two large, very real problems with Google Drive. For starters Google has a long history of abandoning projects after they fail to gain users on them. This would be a huge problem with cloud storage like Google Drive.

      Insofar as that is true, that history includes doing so with a long warning before cutting off access and with quite good support for outbound migration, so I don't see why it would be much of a rational concern. Further, the kind of cloud storage user interface being provided is a pretty trivial layer on top of the cloud storage backend that underlies many other Google services that its a pretty low risk of it being discontinued.

      I also fail to see why this would get any good amount of users even if Google did advertise it correctly - unlike their search engine, gmail and youtube, cloud storage is nothing new.

      Neither web search engines, web-based email, or web-based video hosting were anything new when Google's search engine, Gmail, or YouTube (which wasn't Google's when it was introduced) were introduced. Nevertheless, each managed to do quite well.

      Free-to-start, generous quota, and zero-effort (or close to it) signup if you already have a Google Account, by themselves, will get them some users. Actually having some interesting distinguishing features compared to other cloud storage providers would obviously be important to getting substantially more users. The most obvious opportunity I see for Google here is integration with Google Docs.

      Lastly, but even more so importantly, putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid.

      How?

      They already know so much - hell, they track Slashdot too.

      Tracking slashdot may be evidence of inefficient use of resources, but its hardly an argument in support of "they know too much!" scaremongering.

      On top of that Google has serious problem with anti-competition regulators and this is just going to make those issues worse when Dropbox and other companies will demand Google to stop leveraging their search engine against them.

      Well, it might cause problems in that regard, if there was evidence that Google was illegally leveraging anything against competitors in the cloud storage space. Then again, as I discuss below, it probably wouldn't even then.

      They already have this problem in other markets.

      Winning in two different markets to the extent where established players in one feel that its worth their effort to complain that you are leveraging your market position in one to dominate the other is the exact opposite of a "problem" for the firm that is in that position.

      It might lead to a problem if you actually were doing something that was likely to produce a signficant restraining action from some government, but as many other firms have demonstrated (notably Microsoft in the software market), even actually illegally leveraging a monopoly in one market to monopolize another rarely results in any remedy that is either timely enough to make any substantial impact on the utility of the action, or significant enough to outweigh the benefits you gain from doing it.

    15. Re:Google Drive by Missing.Matter · · Score: 5, Informative

      You must be pretty young to not remember a time when someone might have had to actually delete messages before they received new ones because they ran out of storage in their inbox. We're talking services that offered like 2mb for storage. Then Google came around and offered an entire gigabyte, promising to never have to worry about your inbox capacity again. This absolutely caused many people to switch to gmail. When hotmail and others realized this, they followed suit and started upping their mailbox capacity to match gmail's.

    16. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 2

      Email definitely is storage. You don't want to keep deleting your emails all the time. You most likely also want to search through your old emails. With other free services of the time you would have to keep deleting them constantly as otherwise the message box got full and you didn't get new emails.

    17. Re:Google Drive by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      There are two large, very real problems with Google Drive. For starters Google has a long history of abandoning projects after they fail to gain users on them. This would be a huge problem with cloud storage like Google Drive.

      They do tend to give you quite a bit of notice though. It may be a hassle, but it's not like it's impossible to download your stuff and upload it somewhere else.

    18. Re:Google Drive by Missing.Matter · · Score: 5, Funny

      Gmail offered 1gb of mail storage per user while the competition offered something like 2mb. For Google Drive to be equally impressive, I'd expect them to offer 1.25tb of cloud storage per user. :P

    19. Re:Google Drive by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Since Google Music was just recently launched, why didn't they do it with Google Drive to begin with? Same is true for Picasa, or now Google+. Seems they are just separating their services.

      Picasa is not recent - it has been there for years (G+ integration is what's recent).

      I don't know about Google Music, though. Maybe it is actually built on top of GDrive?

    20. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 4, Informative

      In fact even Microsoft's offering, SkyDrive, is currently offering 25GB for free. Google is seriously lagging behind in this.

    21. Re:Google Drive by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      There are two large, very real problems with Google Drive. For starters Google has a long history of abandoning projects after they fail to gain users on them. This would be a huge problem with cloud storage like Google Drive.

      How would it be a "huge problem" if Google should abandon this cloud-storage? It's only 5gig, after all, and they give away 4gig flash drives in boxes of cereal (practically).

      The only reason I'd use it is to allow me to access files from anywhere, the way I use dropbox now. I would never use either service as a backup system. Hell, I won't use ANY cloud-based backup system. It's pretty easy to create your own ubiquitous storage anyway, flash memory being so cheap.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    22. Re:Google Drive by Charliemopps · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't necessarily disagree with your arguments but I'd like to offer arguments to each:

      1. Googles target audience is not the corporate user. It's people at home that want to backup photos and such. These people will probobly have a google account, a dropbox account, etc... etc.. The more places you can backup your data the better. If Google drops the product, oh well.

      2. I don' think this needs a "Good amount of users" Much like microsoft, Google wants to offer you every option. They don't want to force you to use another companies product simply because they don't offer a "google version" The biggest threat that Google would ever face would be a company offering something they do not, and then that something becoming ubiquitous enough that the rival company could offer the same service that Google does and kill off their business (see facebook)

      3. Google, like every other corporation on earth, doesn't give a shit about anti-competition regulation. They can, just like Apple, Microsoft, and everyone else, just ignore it... then, when sued, draw out the court battle so long that the companies in question will die long before any litigation is resolved. Even if they do not, the fines levied are almost always so small they are a joke. If I get a speeding ticket, the fine is about 3 days pay for me. How about when a buisness gets a fine they get a similar fine... 3days gross income. Well, that's another topic.

    23. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is that Play-for-sure working for you?

    24. Re:Google Drive by vaccum+pony · · Score: 2

      I already use Gmail as a dumb (limited) data store. With encryption.

    25. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone here ever use ricemail / rmail ? talk about limited space. of course back then you didn't have 1 meg of images in a newsletter.

    26. Re:Google Drive by dehole · · Score: 2

      Exactly. With Google Drive, you and your data is the product.

    27. Re:Google Drive by Lumpy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Nobody is using skydrive. Microsoft has to offer than t much to even attract people.

      Dropbox is still eating microsoft lunch on their skydrive.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    28. Re:Google Drive by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      I know, I found it interesting that TFA doesn't mention this. As a live account user, I don't see this big deal of this announcement.

    29. Re:Google Drive by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      "Yet, Gmail still didn't win Hotmail or Yahoo which to date are the two largest email providers on planet."
      Yet, Yahoo and Hotmail still didn't win AOL users which to date still has a huge number of users.

      Yes, they do. It makes most tech people weep, but I meet someone in business weekly that has a @AOL address.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    30. Re:Google Drive by Galestar · · Score: 2

      You missed the point. To change storage providers you don't have to make sure 100 different websites use your new "address" - like an email address or a phone number.

      --
      AccountKiller
    31. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You may think that nobody is using it, but it is actually quite widespread service. Of course, Microsoft also offers it for Office and other business users with actual SLA, unlike Google.

      SkyDrive will also be directly integrated into Windows 8, which will most likely bring them millions of users. Hell, even Apple uses Microsoft's cloud offerings, albeit that is Microsoft Azure as they need programming access too.

    32. Re:Google Drive by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I'd say the first of those two is the big "Uh oh" with Google drive, after all you could always encrypt your stuff before you sent it. But as we have seen with Google its either a megahit or its dead, there really is no in between with that company so i would be seriously leery of wanting to store my stuff with them until I saw whether or not its gonna last.

      Of course all of these cloud storage bunches that aren't targeting businesses is gonna end up screwed anyway as it looks like the ISPs are just gonna cap the ever loving shit out of anything they aren't getting a cut of.....err i mean "hosting in their local datacenter" so unless they are gonna set up a branch on every local ISP this whole "in the cloud" thing will come screeching to a halt the first time someone gets that insane bill for going over their caps. i know in my area its $1.50 a Gb if you go over so its much cheaper just to slap everything on a USB drive and cart it offsite than it is to deal with the overcharges.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    33. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 0

      Images aren't usually sent with emails, they are loaded from a server.

    34. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 0

      I don't really know the details of Lumia 900, but WP7 actually is a great OS. Your blind hatred towards MS is just keeping you from admitting that. And yes, programming with Visual Studio and .NET is a blast. I've recently started using OS X and Objective-C and Xcode is nowhere close Microsoft's offerings for developers. And Linux is even further behind.

    35. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's not blind hatred, we've just been used to better for a few years already :) How much does all the BS pay, though?

    36. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is true that MS is offering a lot for free but they are not gaining users like dropbox due
      1. No API. No API means no serious apps on Windows, Windows Phone, Android and iOS.
      2. Limited file types. You cannot store just any file type.
      3. No folder synchronization on the desktop.
      So MS tied their own hands and feet on this one.
      Skydrive is great for photo sharing though.

    37. Re:Google Drive by demonbug · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I also fail to see why this would get any good amount of users even if Google did advertise it correctly - unlike their search engine, gmail and youtube, cloud storage is nothing new. There are tons of companies offering their services with ridiculously low profit margins. Hell, most of them are free for home users, and I really wouldn't trust Google with my company or work data [...] Lastly, but even more so importantly, putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid. They

      Yeah, and for the same reasons their e-mail service never caught on.

      Speaking of Gmail, currently it says I have 7.7 GB of free storage there. Can't they at least match this with their new Cloud drive? I already use Gmail for temporary storage all the time - just attach files to draft emails and I can access them from anywhere.

    38. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 1, Funny

      Can you tell me more about the amazing Microsoft SharePoint, which I can use in conjunction with fantastic business tools like Microsoft Great Plains to increase my productivity and my profitability?

      No, but you can Bing for that!

    39. Re:Google Drive by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      I use Dropbox as a backup system - part of a rational, multi component program. The Dropbox data is on every machine I have the account on (three currently), so that's different local stores - one at home, one at work, one in my backpack, one in the cloud. Personal info is encrypted in sparseimages - I could use truecrypt as well if I really wanted a multi platform solution.

      It doesn't backup everything - my terabyte collection of pictures and video is backed up locally using a NAS and external drives - but Dropbox is hella convenient for some data. And pretty safe. If Dropbox went belly up tomorrow, I would be missing just one out of three copies of the data.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    40. Re:Google Drive by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Informative

      You may think that nobody is using it, but it is actually quite widespread service. Of course, Microsoft also offers it for Office and other business users with actual SLA, unlike Google.

      Well, Google doesn't offer Google Drive at all yet. I don't know what the basis is for assuming that when they do, they won't offer it to to paid users with an SLA as they already do for similar services (notably including the Cloud Storage API.)

      SkyDrive will also be directly integrated into Windows 8, which will most likely bring them millions of users.

      Yeah, if only Google had a widely used consumer operating system with which they could bundle Google Drive.

    41. Re:Google Drive by Nerdfest · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Speaking of Picasa, I'm disappointed with Google's support for Linux lately. For a company that actively shuns Windows for its own users, they seem to be lacking in support for it these days. The latest versions of Picasa have dropped support for Linux ... it'll be interesting to see if this has a Linux client, or even better, and open API.

    42. Re:Google Drive by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Google Music, though. Maybe it is actually built on top of GDrive?

      Its more likely that Google Music and the forthcoming Drive are built on the same low-level cloud storage layer that underlies many of Google's cloud offerings -- like Docs, the Cloud Storage API, and many others.

      Its unlikely that Music or any of the others are built on Drive.

    43. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but you can Bing for that!

      Who is Bing? How does canning him help?

    44. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I am not a shill and I have 25 GB of storage on each of my three accounts on skydrive. I also have 2 GB with dropbox - which I use more due to the automatic sync. Nothing automatically syncs with Skydrive. However it is a lot more space. But, for my KeePass files, dropbox handles that nicely. Now, on my test Windows 8 machine Skydrive sort of integrates - in a "half way" kind of rudimentary way into the OS. It doesn't show up in the "File" | "Open" menu like you would want for something that is fully integrated. If the Google Drive integrates into the file menu, I'll use it preferentially over Skydrive for sure.

    45. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As a live account user

      I LOL'd.

    46. Re:Google Drive by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it would be out of character for Google not to at least offer this to existing Google account holders, unless they're going to do it invite only initially to slow down adoption like they did with Google Music.

    47. Re:Google Drive by interkin3tic · · Score: 2
      Serious problems with anti-competitive regulators, or serious problems from a lot of sore losers whining through their lobbyists and media? I have yet to hear a good explanation for how google is being anti-competitive. Mail, search, maps, adsense... I can't think of a single thing they do that there isn't healthy competition going on.

      The closest thing I've heard is whining about how they won't release their methods for ranking pages, and the only people that seem to be whining about that are SEOs who want to spam it, breaking google search for everyone else.

      putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid. They already know so much - hell, they track Slashdot too.

      Not a very good example there: I don't really write anything I intend to keep private on slashdot.

    48. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty certain I remember that fine. My point was that changing an email address (unless you own the domain) is like changing your name, or phone number or bank. It is invasive and storage is not always enough to make someone switch. File storage is just space. It isn't a namespace or calling card or way for old friends to get in touch...email addresses were more valuable before social networking really took off.

      I never really relied on the free email services like others did since I had my own domain, but I knew plenty of people who had to "manage" their storage.

    49. Re:Google Drive by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Google support for Linux for their native client apps was always lackluster - didn't they actually use WineLib for Picasa? And they never had a GTalk client, either.

      As far as protocols go, I'd fully expect it to be documented at the very least, and most likely it'll be something industry-standard like WebDAV. On the other hand, they didn't document GMusic (though, being a simple web service, it was promptly reverse-engineered, and there are several third-party apps supporting it now).

    50. Re:Google Drive by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      With the plethora of forwarding and mailbox combining options available, even in 2003, switching mail providers is pretty seamless. This is in stark contrast to changing your phone number and bank.

    51. Re:Google Drive by Nerdfest · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, Picasa and Google Earth use Wine. You can actually get the latest versions working manually, but it would be nice to see a little support given how much they rely on Linux. They do have a Google chat client, which is nice.

      Seems to me Google would be much further ahead having an actual Google-branded Linux distro available along-side their Chrome downloads for people still on XP. This is the optimal time for them, before MS starts trying to lock down bootloaders.

    52. Re:Google Drive by Urza9814 · · Score: 3, Informative

      My Gmail account is currently using 2.5 GIGS. Before Gmail existed, the largest mailbox capacity that existed (as far as I know) was Fastmail, with 10 megs, with 1-2mb being common (hotmail, yahoo, aol, etc). I would generally overflow those in 6 months to a year. Granted, a lot of my gmail emails I could do without. Others -- hell, I still have attachments of hundreds of kilobytes, sometimes even megabytes, from five years ago that I pull up occasionally. For me at least, Gmail's storage capacity revolutionized email. 'email it to yourself' or even 'email it to me' was not a feasible way to transfer or store files until Gmail (Gmail was also the first, and still one of the few, providers to allow large attachments. Most providers still limit it to 10 megs, while Gmail is 20. Your guess is as good as mine as to what the limit was with a 2 meg inbox.) The search helps a lot too, though that's obviously related -- no need for search it if you can't store it. I'm a lot more likely to remember that I got a PDF of that two semesters ago from Ms. xyz than I am to remember where the hell I stored that file. Plus I've gone through four or five computers since getting Gmail, so files that I can currently just grab out of my email would have otherwise been scattered across six or seven hard drives.

      Yes, users don't want a new email address. That's why I love gmail. In the two years before gmail launched the situation with email storage was really getting to be a problem, due to increasing internet speed and file sizes. I think I went through four email accounts in those two years. Some of that was due to storage, some due to spam (When gmail launched there was no comparison with the spam filters. They're still among the best. Went from a dozen or so spams a day to less than one a month) So...I went from changing addresses every six months to having the same address for about eight years now. The desire to keep one constant email address is exactly why Gmail was so popular. Maybe not for people like my father, who's STILL on hotmail, but for people who use email heavily that was certainly a large part of the motivation.

    53. Re:Google Drive by HJED · · Score: 2

      No one is using it because Dropbox has better cross platform support and offline storage.

      --
      null
    54. Re:Google Drive by flappinbooger · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and for the same reasons their e-mail service never caught on.

      Or their calendar, their docs, their OS, their phones, or their social med... nevermind, got carried away there.

      --
      Flappinbooger isn't my real name
    55. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, every single Android user being "gifted" with it is a nice head start...

    56. Re:Google Drive by errandum · · Score: 1

      You fail to consider that this service might have something different. Most google services did not innovate, search was already there, e-mail was already there, even calendars were already there. And then google gave you more value for free (or for data). Some might dislike that, I know I don't...

      5gb is already a step in the right direction. But I'm thinking that integration with other google services (for example, douments -> docs, files to e-mail in an instant, etc).

      If you have sensitive files, this service is not directed at you (:

    57. Re:Google Drive by darkmeridian · · Score: 4, Informative

      I use TrueCrypt on my Dropbox to make a secure volume that I just drop my stuff into. It's annoying to have to log in and stuff but it's still worth it for the added security.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    58. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. But Microsoft scans your content, and blocks stuff they don't like. They have done quite a bit of horrible mislabel jobs on pictures as porn and worse.

    59. Re:Google Drive by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I use Google Apps (don't knock it--good business-class SLA that secures my data, Device Management, etc.) and Google Connect syncs all of my documents onto Google Docs transparently from Microsoft Word. Imagine just saving all my files on there directly. Hmmmm..... Even more points if it saves versioning. That would make me not use Microsoft SharePoint.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    60. Re:Google Drive by arth1 · · Score: 1

      I think it could be a useful backup for /dev/random
      Right now I use an USB key for that (no, really, I do), but it would be nice to have a larger entropy pool I can read from anywhere. If it didn't require a Google account and accepting tracking cookies in my browser, that is.

      Of course, if everybody used it for this, Google would probably close the service, as compression and dedup would end up consuming extra space instead of saving space.

    61. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and apple has dropped the ball on cloud storage when iDisk goes offline this summer.
      Fx. they can sync iWork documents on ios devices but not osx. Idiotic.
      I have iCloud today, converted from MobileMe. But I see no reason to pay for more space than the free 5gb when my account are up for renewal.
      So I am looking for a iDisk replacement.

    62. Re:Google Drive by drkstr1 · · Score: 1

      How did you type all that in under a minute? You must be the fastest typer EVER!

      --
      Fanboy Status: Apache Flex, C#, Eclipse, KDE, Pirate Party, Ron Paul, Slackware, Windows 7
    63. Re:Google Drive by Sporkinum · · Score: 2

      I don't trust Google, so I only use it as a spam catcher and for work voicemail transcribed.
      Using 159 MB of your 7701 MB

      I wouldn't trust them for storage as well, unless I encrypted everything before storing it.

      I am still using my same ISP for email for the last 11 years. If my imap gets full, I down load and archive it locally.

      --
      "He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
    64. Re:Google Drive by djhertz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I was doing truecrypt but didn't like the extra steps to open a file, dump stuff in, etc. I gave boxcryptor http://www.boxcryptor.com/ a whirl and have been very happy with it. It adds on right to dropbox. It's free (up to 2 gig of encryption) and a one time fee for unlimited. I tried spider oak too but didn't like how it all worked and I'm not a fan of re-occuring costs.

      --
      Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise - William Shakespeare
    65. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they only stored one copy of a particular file and just linked/unlinked access on different accounts, they could cut down on total storage needed for some groups of people.

    66. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so unaware. Does the 5G Windows Live Mesh which supports any file and syncs folders ring any bell? It has an API by the way since 4 years ago (beta program).

    67. Re:Google Drive by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 5, Informative

      Nobody is using skydrive

      I like SkyDrive, but the max file size (50 megs IIRC?) means that for me it's dead in the water. I realize MS is concerned about people using it to trade pirated movies and music, but it also means the service is pretty useless. If I can't even send my parents a video of their granddaughter playing in the park, or singing happy birthday, what's the point?

    68. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What DropBox (perhaps box.net to a lesser extent) has that no other provider has is the API access:

      1: My Android phone can automatically sync photos and Titanium backups to a directory on DB.

      2: I can securely store files in a TC volume. This way, I have backups of sensitive documents in almost real time, but if for some reason someone obtained access to by DB account, the files are protected.

      3: If I accidently delete a file, I just use the "packrat" feature.

      Its features are hard to beat, and the price is right.

    69. Re:Google Drive by StevenBielberg · · Score: 1

      Google has never really cared about Linux. They use it when it suits them - on their servers (and they don't open most of the code) and on Android, because that is what the company that initially developed Android used and it suits them. Linux, for Google, is basically just a cheap way to get stuff done where they would otherwise have to spend lots of money and effort. They don't really care about the ideology behind it.

    70. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh look, the monkey's are throwing shit, again.

    71. Re:Google Drive by jockm · · Score: 1

      Its almost like you are saying Google is a business or something. Anything you don't run an manage yourself can disappear at any time*. It's about calculated risk. If the service is useful, then I will use it. I never use any kind of cloud storage to keep data I don't back up elsewhere, and neither should you.

      But if you aren't going to use something because it might go away, well that just about describes everything. I am glad Google is getting more focused, trying things and then getting rid of them if they don't work out. This way they have more resources to keep trying new things.

      *: And things that you do manage 100% yourself are probably about as (or more) likely to go away, in my experience.

      --

      What do you know I wrote a novel
    72. Re:Google Drive by elashish14 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow, that's really smart of them, imposing a limit on file size to stop piracy. Cause nobody's gonna try splitting their files to get around that limit, nor would they even imagine using encryption to hide the contents of the files.

      That is about as useful as DRM. Sucks for the people who use the service legitimately, easily bypassed for those who want to circumvent it anyways.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    73. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There are tons of companies offering their services with ridiculously low profit margins. Hell, most of them are free for home users, and I really wouldn't trust Google with my company or work data"

      This is why if you're going to use an online storage service, you're better off with Google than many of those companies with low profit margins that you mention. Many of them will probably go out of business, taking your data to the grave with them. Google is much less likely than them to go out of business.

    74. Re:Google Drive by justforgetme · · Score: 1

      teach you subtly = teach you in a subtle way
      teach you subtlety = teach you the ways of being subtle

      </pedant></grammar_Nazi></offtopic>

      --
      -- no sig today
    75. Re:Google Drive by justforgetme · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the modern world! You are a criminal here but we won't accuse you of it in the face or let you prove otherwise!

      --
      -- no sig today
    76. Re:Google Drive by justforgetme · · Score: 1

      Ohh, there are enough """web developers""" out there that just throw them in there as attachments...

      --
      -- no sig today
    77. Re:Google Drive by SomePgmr · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I wouldn't be surprised. As it is, I pay Google for storage that's shared across all of their services. Picasa, Docs, Gmail, etc. all share the one 20GB I pay Google for at $5/yr.

      Their current pricing for storage, in addition to the free storage quota:

      20 GB ($5.00 USD per year)
      80 GB ($20.00 USD per year)
      200 GB ($50.00 USD per year)
      400 GB ($100.00 USD per year)
      1 TB ($256.00 USD per year)
      2 TB ($512.00 USD per year)
      4 TB ($1,024.00 USD per year)
      8 TB ($2,048.00 USD per year)
      16 TB ($4,096.00 USD per year)

    78. Re:Google Drive by justforgetme · · Score: 0

      Hmm... I don't really recall this. I remember when I signed up for a yahoo mail - I think it was 1999ish - they gave out 25MB or something in that area. Then a year later they bumped that to 250 and 2G. Then gmail came out and offered that annoying KB counter (it was like revisiting 1992) that had started somewhere in the MB range. I don't recall the details from then on because at that moment I stopped following the trends but I think all providers switched to unmetered capacity at that point.

      I always kept a pretty lean mailbox and even now after more than a decade of kept emails I am barely over 2k mails which with a pretty optimistic calculation (most emails are text only) that amounts to about 1G. So even if the mail providers where frozen in the 2GB era I still would be unaffected.

      --
      -- no sig today
    79. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody is using skydrive

      I like SkyDrive, but the max file size (50 megs IIRC?) means that for me it's dead in the water. I realize MS is concerned about people using it to trade pirated movies and music, but it also means the service is pretty useless. If I can't even send my parents a video of their granddaughter playing in the park, or singing happy birthday, what's the point?

      It is 100 megs max per file, not 50.

    80. Re:Google Drive by drkstr1 · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I will commit this one to memory.

      --
      Fanboy Status: Apache Flex, C#, Eclipse, KDE, Pirate Party, Ron Paul, Slackware, Windows 7
    81. Re:Google Drive by freedumb2000 · · Score: 1

      Whatever the reason for the 50Mb limit, especially pirates know how to use split RARs. With that kind of limit, you can't share high res PSDs, 3D renderings or anything else where a 25Gb online storage space actually makes sense. And actually, it sounds perfect for sharing music, even FLAC are less than 50Mb per track.

    82. Re:Google Drive by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Have to disagree, VS is head and shoulders above Eclipse in both niceness of use and ability. I've used Eclipse for a 4 month stretch and I really really despise it. VS is significantly better.

    83. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is Bing? How does canning him help?

      I dunno, but caning might help.

    84. Re:Google Drive by repvik · · Score: 1

      It's "pretty seamless" when you're technically inclined. Those users I know with Hotmail-adresses are not.

    85. Re:Google Drive by mug+funky · · Score: 0

      that's pwnage right there, i gotta admit.

    86. Re:Google Drive by mug+funky · · Score: 0

      Happy Birthday would be copyright infringement...

    87. Re:Google Drive by Macfox · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the 3+ million business that already use Google Apps which does have an SLA.

      --
      Area51 - We are watching...
    88. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you are bashing Visual Studio and praising Eclipse.. you must be working as a shill for IBM.

      Anyone can play that game. Either provide proof or STFU.

    89. Re:Google Drive by repvik · · Score: 2

      Do you think Google will yank the service without providing people ample warning? It's storage. It's most likely pretty darn easy to download your files and upload them somewhere else.

    90. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh you mean how they are bundling google services with millions of android phones? non-technical people are creating google accounts and are tricked into sending their personal data (email.. gps locations, private search keyword data, etc) to google when they buy android phones. i would never trust an advertising company with my data. basically anyone but google.

      in any case.. useful things SHOULD be bundled. if you don't find them useful, don't use them.. simple. I cant imagine installing an OS and have it be broken. for e.g. - no internet browser, or no email client, no media player, or no cloud storage for sharing my files.

    91. Re:Google Drive by hpoul · · Score: 1

      the only people who don't attach them are people who want to track the views of their newsletter, so it makes sense that gmail, thunderbird, etc. won't show external images by default.. if you send a big email, include it in total, why only include half of the message.. you could just have sent a link to your website if you don't want to use email in the first place..
      or, simply send out small emails without 5 MB worth of images..

      --
      Find me at http://herbert.poul.at
    92. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christ, if you are that paranoid about being crawled, encrypt your damn files then.

      Oh no, Google is going to know you took a picture with a few red pixels, a bunch of green, some blue and yellow, and various shades of peach.
      Oh god, LIFE OVER! What will I do now that Google knows these oh-so-intimate details of my random picture I took down the park when walking!

    93. Re:Google Drive by asdf7890 · · Score: 1
      There are two large, very real problems with Google Drive. For starters Google has a long history of abandoning projects after they fail to gain users on them. This would be a huge problem with cloud storage like Google Drive.

      That is a potential problem with all "cloud" based services, not just storage. In fact it is the same protential problem that exists for non-cloud stuff: things can fail.

      The trick is to avoid single points of failure. Google presumably have sufficient redundancy, correctly configured, such that everything should survive all but a catastrophic problem - but if high availalability is important to you they are a single point of failure (what do you do if their service is down for a couple of hours, or a full working day?). If you use something like this, just use two or more. Drop box down? Find the files in Google's service, or restore from your local backups if you have sufficient bandwidth.

      Using multipe services also protects you from "shutdown surprise". This is less important for storage as it is simpler (Google would give good notice prior to service shutdown, and moving files from one provider to another is going to be relatively painless). But for more complex services (from backups beyond simply "keeping a copy of your files out there" to full app hosting) a shutdown might be a lot more hassle. Using two services, or at least keeping a second in mind so your code is easy to refactor should you need to move, forces you to think in a way that reduces your level of lock-in with a particular service. You don't have to host a full app active on two services simultaneously (this may be a waste of resource unlike with simple storage where keeping two active copies is easy), just make sure you have a migration plan and review (or better: test) that plan after any significant change to the app.

    94. Re:Google Drive by justforgetme · · Score: 1

      You don't need to include all images in order to track views, that job is usually done by an independent asset and things you follow have their external assets allowed usually. If your newsletter is of the spamy type, aka people don't expect to hear from you prior to it's arrival then you probably would like to add the images as attachments since it is unlikely people will see them otherwise but spam was never a use case on my projects.
      Email attachments had their uses, now they are pretty much obsolete. Also if part of your email's content is encapsulated in the images and the images are not the reason for the email you are doing it wrong.

      HTML emails aka "emails with graphical content done right" have their uses, namely prettyfication of the plain text version of the email.

      --
      -- no sig today
    95. Re:Google Drive by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > putting everything for Google to datamine and crawl is just stupid

      Yes it is...however, I feel the same way about every other company, including the ones with the SLA who say they wont ever look at your data. Unless its encrypted on disk and they don't have the key, then I don't trust it...because it means trusting them, trusting courts that may order them to look, trusting every employee they ever hire, trusting anyone who compromises their system, thats a lot of trust.

      I see no mention of linux (which is basically all I use at home or work, unless you count booting windows for the exlusive purpose of playing steam games)... but Mac users should be able to use encfs, which I have used in the past with similar services.

      These services, even the free ones, are just fine, as long as you take the right precautions. The only files (at all) you will find on any cloud storage of mine are encrypted.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    96. Re:Google Drive by Inda · · Score: 2

      I'll tell you what Google bring to the table:

      The name of Google.

      I tried to get my family on Dropbox. I even offered to answer all their surveys and upload video data in order to get another 5gb. The family needed a way to send large files and Dropbox, with it's Android integration, was the answer. They couldn't arsed and still burn CDRs for people. We have 50mbit/5mbit in this house. *facepalm*.

      Google can offer 5gb from Google with a simple single click from a Google webpage like Google Play.

      --
      This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
    97. Re:Google Drive by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      a long history? It was just this last year that Larry Page decided to kill a bunch of under performing projects. prior to that, Google let things continue to suck resources.

    98. Re:Google Drive by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      DropBox can decrypt your data. I hope you pre-encrypt anything important.

    99. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goobuntu

    100. Re:Google Drive by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Exchange for Windows Server 2003 has a 2GB per mailbox limit, and back when I did support we had a lot of people running into that.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    101. Re:Google Drive by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      They have always kept storage for Gmail and other apps separate, e.g. you get 1GB for all your docs and Picasa that doesn't count towards Gmail. Oddly enough when you buy extra storage (at a very reasonable $5/year for 20GB) it counts towards both.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    102. Re:Google Drive by chowdahhead · · Score: 1

      Google Earth does not use wine--I don't recall that ever being the case. Download it for yourself and you'll find native linux binaries and libraries with a Qt UI. In fact, Picassa is the only Google product I know of that relies on wine.

    103. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree completely with your first point. I run the technology operations team for a medium-sized company and we use Google Apps for business. This could have a huge upside for businesses moving to Google Apps as it could eliminate the need for companies to provide user-accessible shared storage locally.

    104. Re:Google Drive by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      He's a subscriber, and those can see the published articles earlier than others.

    105. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      video of ... singing happy birthday

      distributing video of your daughter singing "happy birthday" would be a copyright violation......

    106. Re:Google Drive by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      In fact even Microsoft's offering, SkyDrive, is currently offering 25GB for free.

      I don't have a SkyDriver account (and don't plan to create one just to test it), so I have to resort to other sources of information. Wikipedia mentions that 25GB of storage, but also states that it has an individual file size limit of 100MB. If that's true, that's a) an odd limitation and b) does certainly reduce its use cases.

    107. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In summary: "Operating systems SHOULD come with useful apps and services. Anything that you don't use can be ignored. The above statements do not apply to Google products, which are arbitrarily on the avoid list. You're better off giving your data to firms with equivalent profit motives."

      Are you trolling?

    108. Re:Google Drive by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      I see no valid arguments in your post.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    109. Re:Google Drive by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      I have a Live account at my college, not by choice, and I rarely use but for .edu verification for free Microsoft software licenses.

      [throws invectim]

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    110. Re:Google Drive by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      Uh...er...I get contacted by people all the time who use, overwhelmingly, gmail. Mind you, they are using it to establish a dialog with me, not to plug into a form for sign-up. Most of the people I converse with anymore use gmail, which is very surprising to me. Anecdotal, but I once thought as you did. It appears people have embraced gmail. It is a good solid service that is free of the distracting interface presented by yahoo and AOL (hotmail? that is still up?). People can also get a new intelligible email address on gmail, which is a big incentive to switch. my.name@gmail.com or sestra98@aol.com? You be the judge.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    111. Re:Google Drive by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      Exchange for Windows Server 2003 has a 2GB per mailbox limit, and back when I did support we had a lot of people running into that.

      Exchange 2003 has no such limit. At least the one we're running here. Do you by chance confuse that with Outlook's PST file size limit?

    112. Re:Google Drive by Petaris · · Score: 1

      The pricing for 1TB on is interesting. ;)

      It works out to be $1 for 4GB, a decent price but still amusing. :)

      --
      ~Petaris "The world is open. Are you?"
    113. Re:Google Drive by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      Wuala claims to encrypt your files locally:

      All files are directly encrypted on your desktop. Your password never leaves your computer. Not even we as the provider can access your files or your password.

      I'm giving it a try at the moment and so far it seems to work. If has both a sync and a backup option. It offers clients for Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android. It's not open source and there currently seems to be no API. It's still in beta, so there's hope an API might eventually be added later on.

      If you sign up with this referral, you'll start with 3GB instead of 2GB for the free account.

      Disclosure: I'll receive additional 250MB storage space per account creation through that referral, up to a max of 5GB, as you can read here.

    114. Re:Google Drive by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      If only there was some utility that would do all that for you?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAR

      Nothing like putting limitations on accounts that can be defeated by 1993 technology, originally developed to defeat a lack of technology.

    115. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsofts motive is to sell me windows. I can use Windows product without sending a bit of data to microsoft servers.

      Google gives products for free and has to recover equivalent value in personal data. The more data they can force me to send to them the better for them (that is why they will never create product which does not send them my personal data). I would rather not encourage such a business model.

    116. Re:Google Drive by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      That's kind of absurd, since Apple iCloud has negligible penetration for a marginal user base.

      If you're going up anyone, you go up against an innovative market leader. Unfortunately, that means Dropbox and Microsoft's SkyDrive.

      Most of what iCloud claims to do Google has been doing for quite a few years already (with Android and various connectors for various applications). Google Docs takes care of most of the iCloud requirement, as does the ability to store files within your gmail storage already...

      Google is just turning what people are already doing into a tangible and independent service for functional isolation/autonomy.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    117. Re:Google Drive by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, they are fixing this in Mountain Lion, but it is baffling that they didn't have iCloud working with OS X from the start.

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    118. Re:Google Drive by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

      I am really curious: What is the reason for doing this?

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    119. Re:Google Drive by madhi19 · · Score: 1

      Yeah right because Windows never ever phone home! loll And if you believe that I got some swamp land to sell you.

    120. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the two main problems are: Google cannot be trusted when it comes to privacy and, equally important: Reliability. There is yet another GMail outage today. Do you trust these guys who cannot run a simple e-mail service with your cloud storage?

      --
      Disclaimer: I work for TAGA (The Arrogant Google Assholes)

    121. Re:Google Drive by arth1 · · Score: 1

      On systems without a hardware random generator, /dev/random generally only holds a very small pool of random data, and it can take a lot of time to generate even just a small amount when needed. Example, getting just 1 kB of random data:

      $ dd if=/dev/random of=foo bs=1 count=1024
      1024+0 records in
      1024+0 records out
      1024 bytes (1.0 kB) copied, 188.854 s, 0.0 kB/s

      More than 3 minutes for a single kB in this case, on a Core i7 machine. /dev/urandom is much faster, but it's pseudo-random data, and can sometimes fail tests for randomness (like FIPS 140-2), which may prevent the data from being usable in an app.

      So pregenerating some big blocks of random data and storing it where you can reach it when needed can be a time saver.

      Of course, if you want the random data for cryptography, you probably don't want to store it unencrypted in a cloud, but for other use, it's practical.

    122. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am using Windows on a PC that is not connected to internet for years. Its been working for me all this while. Maybe you are just stupid. Its ok.. people who are anti-ms trolls.. usually are stupid.

    123. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be naïve.

    124. Re:Google Drive by Urza9814 · · Score: 2

      http://web.archive.org/web/20021202101745/http://mail.yahoo.com/

      December 2002 archive of Yahoo's own site states:

      Free 4MB storage - up to twice as much as other free email providers!

      Around '04 they moved that up to 100 megs to compete with Gmail, then went unlimited some time after that. Are you sure you didn't have a paid 'Yahoo! Mail Plus' account? Those apparently had 25 megs starting in 1999.

    125. Re:Google Drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And people who are anti-Google trolls are not. That's a great achievement in human thought - if you turn off internet, your device won't send any data anywhere!

      My Android smartbook feels just fine without internet as well. Your point is?

      And yes, you can disable all phoning home in Chrome and in Android (well, not counting ads).

    126. Re:Google Drive by nightfell · · Score: 1

      But Google is excessively fickle in this regard. You are thinking far too binary, where something that happens now and then, and something that happens all the fucking time, are treated as equal simply because they both happen.

    127. Re:Google Drive by swalve · · Score: 1

      It's only random the first time you use it.

    128. Re:Google Drive by Samizdata · · Score: 1

      Yeah, with a craptacular 100Mb per file size limit, which means I can't use it to offsite my Gmail backup, even seriously compressed.

      --
      It's not the years, honey, it's the mileage. - Colonel Henry Walton Jones, Jr., Ph.D.
    129. Re:Google Drive by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      I know two people with Windows Phone 7 and both wouldn't buy it again. One has already moved to Android (Samsung Galaxy II) and the other will probably get an IPhone when his contract is up. YMMV.

      As far as .NET is concerned, that's great, if you want it to run only under Windows and I suppose the same is true for Objective-C and IOS. I'm developing a large (1.5 million lines of code) Java project which has to run on Windows and Linux so .NET is not an answer.

    130. Re:Google Drive by arth1 · · Score: 1

      It's only random the first time you use it.

      Well, yes and no. If it's for distinct and separate purposes, it's fine to re-use, as it's still random.
      One can use the same random data to test two different algorithms with, for example. And even should, if collecting performance metrics.
      Was it Sperry Rand that published a book of one million random numbers? It was useful back then, even if re-used.

      For cryptography or other security related use, or where two programs interact, no, you don't want to re-use the data. Which is why I wrote "several blocks", so you can use and discard.

      Given that the standard entropy pool size in Linux is just 256 bytes (0-4096 bits, aiming for 2048), and likely close to zero when anyone has used /dev/random or /dev/urandom, it doesn't hurt to have a key fob with a bunch of pre-generated random blocks.

      I'd carry a Simtec Entropykey if it wasn't for it requiring special software to be installed to use it.

    131. Re:Google Drive by justforgetme · · Score: 1

      Hmmm.... I stand corrected. Memory thy are a heartless damsel...

      --
      -- no sig today
    132. Re:Google Drive by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

      For whatever reason (my bet's on Google Drive going live), Wuala up'd its storage to 5GB for the free account.

  2. Privacy? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Informative

    Even Dropbox do some encryption, less than perfect though it may be... AFAIK Google don't scan your docs for data like they do with emails. How will it work with your private files?

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    1. Re:Privacy? by Calos · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dropbox has encryption, but Dropbox has all the keys. If you're worried about your privacy from the party offering the service, you can't give Dropbox a pass.

      I think Ars ran an article about a service recently which uses better encryption. Or you can just encrypt your own files before uploading, or use TrueCrypt.

      --
      I vote based on politicians' actions, unless contrary to my preconceptions. Often wrong, never uncertain. #iamthe99%
    2. Re:Privacy? by olsmeister · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Put a TrueCrypt partition on the drive. Encryption needs to be done at the ends; they are just providing a bit storage medium.

    3. Re:Privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last I read then Dropbox encryption uses the same encryption key for every one.

      So your data is encrypted but they have the decrypt key as well.
      So
      1) They can look at all your files if they like.
      2) If I can figure out my/the decryption key then I can decrypt everyone data, if I get a hold on the encrypted files.

      So what is the real point with there encryption?

    4. Re:Privacy? by Calos · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is that Ars article.

      --
      I vote based on politicians' actions, unless contrary to my preconceptions. Often wrong, never uncertain. #iamthe99%
    5. Re:Privacy? by StevenBielberg · · Score: 2

      If you're worried about your privacy from the party offering the service, you can't give Dropbox a pass.

      Like you noted, you use TrueCrypt or similar. This is even a suggested solution by Dropbox team and it's a valid one, because you should never trust third party provider with your encryption.

      However, at least Dropbox does more encryption on the data and actually stores it in encrypted form, even if they are able to obtain the keys. This is still vastly better than just using HTTPS or other "secure" connection between the client and server but still saving it unencrypted. On top of that HTTPS etc are subject to secure key forgery and man in the middle attacks like providing self-signed key and snooping the connection (a real problem in many less developed countries).

    6. Re:Privacy? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Spideroak lets you keep the keys. Truecrypt will work but does come with two big performance hits. First you have to upload the entire container the first time, after which it should just need differences sending. Unfortunately Windows doesn't allow the client software to know which parts of the file changed via notifications, just that something changed, so it has to scan the entire file. If your container is 1GB then that's scanning 1GB every time you make a change.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    7. Re:Privacy? by Cow+Jones · · Score: 4, Informative
      • If you're looking for privacy, don't store sensitive data in the cloud.
      • If you have to, avoid companies which have an obvious interest in your connections, your data, and your profile.
      • If you need strong transparent client-side encryption, you can either use a TrueCrypt container (like olsmeister mentioned), or use an alternative provider which offers this feature: for example, SpiderOak or Wuala. Dropbox, as you mentioned is not secure, because they hold your keys.
      • Avoid the US and US-based companies for storage of sensitive data. The Patriot Act requires Google to give the DHS access to their servers, even if they are physically located in the EU. Wuala is operated by LaCie, a Swiss company; they guarantee that customer data will always be stored on their servers, which are located in the EU or Switzerland.

      I'm not affiliated with either SpiderOak or LaCie, but we've researched possible cloud storage services last month, and settled on Wuala. So far, no problems.

      --

      Ah, arrogance and stupidity, all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari
    8. Re:Privacy? by w_crossman · · Score: 1

      There are two services that I know of which offer truly secure online storage, Wuala and Spideroak. Jungle Disk can be fairly secure, as well. The former two use Java clients, and the latter is native.

      Personally, I use Wuala and am pleased with it. There is one hole, though, in that it's possible to state whether a known file is stored in your account; if that's a problem, you could store it in a zip. That's good enough for me, so I use it for synchronization, backup, storage, and file sharing.

    9. Re:Privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is not quite good enough. Theoretically, they could get information based on what sectors change and which don't (according to truecrypt's FAQ). Of course, I'm not really sure how useful that is. If only I knew more about cryptography to make an informed decision.

    10. Re:Privacy? by Shoe+Puppet · · Score: 1

      Don't let the horrible UI performance fool you, Spideroak is based on Python and not Java. Wuala doesn't have any jar or class files in its directory and looks native to me.

      --
      (+1, Disagree)
    11. Re:Privacy? by whisper_jeff · · Score: 2

      If you're worried about the content of your files, for whatever reason, don't store the file(s) in the cloud. Period.

    12. Re:Privacy? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      Mozy allows you to store stuff on their system with a private encryption. they do warn you loads about "if you lose the key, you lose the data". That's a backup solution primarily, but they're working on a 'stash' that is an instant-sync type thing.

    13. Re:Privacy? by Mindscrew · · Score: 1

      I do this with dropbox. The only problem is you need to use small containers because everytime you add/modify/delete anything , it has to re-upload the whole thing. For this reason, its impractical to have a 100mb true crypt container to hold documents because every little change uploads another 100mb of data.

    14. Re:Privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It says in the Dropbox privacy statement:

      "If we provide your Dropbox files to a law enforcement agency as set forth above, we will remove Dropbox’s encryption from the files before providing them to law enforcement. However, Dropbox will not be able to decrypt any files that you encrypted prior to storing them on Dropbox."

    15. Re:Privacy? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The also have all the clowns. If you want to be private from anybody at all you shouldn't use a service like dropbox which has already had an incident where all files were open to anybody on the internet that could guess your username (ie. no authentication at all in that incident). Even at it's best you can't revoke access once you've given it yet it give the illusion that you can. Those losers mucked things up so badly that even plain FTP is more secure - that's a truly epic fail.

    16. Re:Privacy? by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Wuala requires java - this is a deal breaker for me.
      Are there any other multiplatform remote storage options that doesn't require non-standard and resource intensive runtime components?

    17. Re:Privacy? by flimflammer · · Score: 2

      Does anyone really think Dropbox considers its individual users important enough to attempt to break their truecrypt volumes? I mean there's wearing a tinfoil hat and there's wearing a full tinfoil body suit.

    18. Re:Privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like you got that ID on the same box you're posting from today.

    19. Re:Privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? Wuala, and the research project it is based on is completely Java. I don't know how they have hidden it in Windows, but the normal Linux version is very obviously Java, and the Mac OS version, if you view the inside of the application container, then you will see...

    20. Re:Privacy? by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like you got that ID on the same box you're posting from today.

      Sounds like this AC is too green to have figured out how to get an ID yet.
      One day, when older, you may grasp concepts like "embedded devices", which generally have a very limited amount of memory and CPU, while at the same time being devices that could benefit from remote storage.

    21. Re:Privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spideroak lets you keep the keys. Truecrypt will work but does come with two big performance hits. First you have to upload the entire container the first time, after which it should just need differences sending. Unfortunately Windows doesn't allow the client software to know which parts of the file changed via notifications, just that something changed, so it has to scan the entire file. If your container is 1GB then that's scanning 1GB every time you make a change.

      This is not true. I have a 4GB Truecrypt container in my Dropbox and it happily uploads only the block that are modified.

      You're correct, the initiate 4GB sync was a pain especially when Dropbox in Australia can give dynamics performance (~10KB/sec) but that is the only time it syncs the total 4GB.

      Dropbox still rocks. Google Drive would really need to bring something innovative for users to switch. Google, hint: automatically upload email attachments to "Google Drive" and then link them via emails thus avoiding the 10MB email attachment limit for most providers.

    22. Re:Privacy? by fnj · · Score: 1

      SpriderOak not only LETS you keep your keys; they MAKE you keep your keys. They don't want to see them. They can't access them. They CAN'T decrypt your data, no matter what nazi demands it of them (and they can't get your password back for you if you forget it). The keys never leave your PC. At least that's what they claim. How you prove that when the client is proprietary closed source code, I don't see.

    23. Re:Privacy? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Put a TrueCrypt partition on the drive. Encryption needs to be done at the ends; they are just providing a bit storage medium.

      If the protocol is at all useful, there will be a FUSE filesystem that does efficient (small-block oriented) encrypted storage on Google Drive within a month.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    24. Re:Privacy? by creepynut · · Score: 1

      Yes, it only uploads the changes. The Dropbox client still needs to scan the entire container to determine what has changed however.

      The only other downfall I have to using Dropbox+Truecrypt is remembering to unmount the volume each time. If you have a Truecrypt volume mounted in multiple locations you end up with a conflicting file which you need to manually correct. It can be a pain.

      I use EncFS in my Dropbox (which BoxCryptor is built on). This way the contents are encrypted and the synchronization happens at the file level, less chance of conflicting files. This also means I can set up my home machine to automatically mount the EncFS volume. My concern is about cloud privacy, not about physical privacy in my home so this works well.

    25. Re:Privacy? by creepynut · · Score: 1

      It does not upload 100mb of data. Dropbox syncs at the block level using an rsync-like algorithm. Dropbox definitely needs to scan the entire container to figure out which blocks have changed and upload. I don't know what the block size is like or if it is determined by Truecrypt/Dropbox/both, but chances are if you change 1mb it is only going to upload approximately 1mb.

  3. 404 Error LOL by psyclone241 · · Score: 0

    Google has created some awesome tools. I use all of them so far. I will most likely use Google Drive as well. Funny thing is though, I visited the site today and got a 404 error! NOT GETTING A WARM AND FUZZY RIGHT NOW!!

    1. Re:404 Error LOL by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      Why would it be anything but a 404? The service hasn't even been released yet.

    2. Re:404 Error LOL by psyclone241 · · Score: 0

      They always have some sort of teaser or demo. Just my humble opinion, if you are going to release something soon, get people excited about it. I don't know about you, but 404 doesn't do that for me.

  4. WebDAV access? by DdJ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We'll have to see. If the new "GDrive" can be securely accessed via the open, standard WebDAV protocol, I'll think it's interesting and I'll be an enthusiastic adopter. If not, then it's just another cloud file locker that uses proprietary client software (or a web UI, no good for integration work), which is considerably less interesting.

    1. Re:WebDAV access? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why not try the free "hubic" service by OVH. 25GB free.
      I use it to backup my linux box (over webdav).

    2. Re:WebDAV access? by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      Why not try the free "hubic" service by OVH. 25GB free.
      I use it to backup my linux box (over webdav).

      Interesting. Looks like it needs a dedicated app to access, right ? No folder syncing ? In typical french fashion the whole thing seems monolingual french too. Not a problem for me, but I imagine a lot of Slashdot folks might have difficulty.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    3. Re:WebDAV access? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (anon from above)
      You do not need the app. You use this Perl script (once) to get the details:
      http://www.protocol-hacking.org/public/hubic.pl
      After that you can use webdav to access your files.
      I use fusedav on Debian Squeeze myself.

  5. remember x drive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    about 10 or 12 years ago there were a few websites giving away free storage space(only a few hundred meg, not gigs). The only one I remember the name of was "x drive". Are any of those still around?

    1. Re:remember x drive? by iYk6 · · Score: 1

      Super Dimension Fortress has been around for 25 years. I get 50 MB of storage space, accessible over ssh or ftp. If I put it in the html directory, I can access and share it from any browser anywhere.

      I haven't moved to any of these new "cloud" storages, because I haven't found anything that I can easily mount and copy files to and from. They all require special software that may or may not be trustworthy.

      There are some downsides to SDF:
      * limited storage space
      * costs 1 dollar (you can keep your anonymity, though. Just send $1 cash, with your username. Return address not necessary)
      * takes a month to set up a new account
      * no human support or contact

  6. 5 GB by Calos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Only 5 GB? Anyone else a little surprised by that?

    My gmail accounts have more space than that, and people have been writing browser extensions and apps for a while to leverage that as cloud storage. 5 GB is at the high end of current free offerings (it matches SugarSync and Box), but by no means revolutionary. You'd think Google, with their resources, would be offering a bit more, especially with their late entry into the game. I guess they can push the tie-ins to other services - like being able to send attachments in Gmail straight to your Google cloud storage. But other than that, what's the incentive, especially if already using another service?

    --
    I vote based on politicians' actions, unless contrary to my preconceptions. Often wrong, never uncertain. #iamthe99%
    1. Re:5 GB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Maybe they were afraid of Facebook and Apple getting together on a script to open a whole bunch of accounts and filling them with gigabytes of random numbers so they couldn't be compressed.

    2. Re:5 GB by Kittenman · · Score: 1

      Only 5 GB? Anyone else a little surprised by that?

      Free. Read my lips. Free. I'm sure they can provide some more space for a little (cough) incentive...

      --
      "The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right sometimes" - Winston Churchill
    3. Re:5 GB by jader3rd · · Score: 5, Informative

      5 GB is at the high end of current free offerings

      SkyDrive is 25 GB and free.

    4. Re:5 GB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And still, no one uses it.

      It will be built in to windows 8 (Sort of Cloud based roaming profiles for home users) because that's the only way Microsoft can get anyone to use any of their online services. Forceful leverage from their existing product lines.

    5. Re:5 GB by Calos · · Score: 1

      You're right, I forgot about that (and I even have an account).

      I never did use it though, even when I was running Windows and used a third party app to make the SkyDrive service look like a network drive.

      Have they added any features? Any native clients that do automatic syncing or anything?

      --
      I vote based on politicians' actions, unless contrary to my preconceptions. Often wrong, never uncertain. #iamthe99%
    6. Re:5 GB by JoeSavage · · Score: 2

      Skydrive has a 100MB limitation per file. Dealbreaker.

      --
      A simile is like a metaphor. A metaphor is a simile.
    7. Re:5 GB by tgd · · Score: 1

      Skydrive has a 100MB limitation per file. Dealbreaker.

      Well, thankfully for most people, the files they need to store aren't that big, and that isn't a limitation. Its not a good option for your bookleg movies or porn collection, but 100MB is plenty for photos, documents, etc. A search on my laptop shows basically nothing above that size that isn't an installer, a ZIP containing a bunch of smaller files, or videos that came from either my digital cameras or my HDV video camera.

      Personally, I'd like the ability to store my entire media library up on Skydrive or a similar service, but I've been averaging 250GB of new stuff a year, so... its not really an option. And I can't but a terabyte and a half of cloud storage from a reputable place at a reasonable price... yet. So 100MB file sizes are fine for me. I suspect that's probably true of the vast majority of users. (I suspect the size is picked to straddle the line between common legitimate file sizes and file sizes that are more typically found on the various warez-plagued file sharing services.)

    8. Re:5 GB by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      If you use Windows Live Mesh you can have a subset of the 25 GB auto sync. I forget if it's 2 GB or 5 GB, though. I don't use the auto sync, so I don't know for sure.

    9. Re:5 GB by swillden · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And I can't but a terabyte and a half of cloud storage from a reputable place at a reasonable price... yet

      I know where you can get about 500 GB for no monthly fee. You just need an always-on server (preferably running *nix) and network connection, and be willing to "trade" storage, storing about 1 TB of other peoples' files (all data is automatically encrypted before upload), using the Tahoe LAFS distributed storage grid. Actually, if you get your own group together you can get as much space as you want, but the grid I'm a member (currently) has a 1 TB maximum. The storage nodes are scattered across several continents and Tahoe applies Reed-Solomon coding to your data so even if many of the servers holding your data were to disappear, you could stil recover all of it.

      If this is interesting, check out our wiki at: http://bigpig.org/twiki/bin/view/Main/WebHome

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    10. Re:5 GB by djhertz · · Score: 1

      Pretty cool, I'm going to check that out.

      --
      Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise - William Shakespeare
    11. Re:5 GB by flimflammer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The reason they give so much extra space for gmail is because most people won't even use a tenth of that space. Hell, I've had a gmail account since the service came out and I think of my like 9 gigs of space they offer, I'm still only like 1% full. I'm a heavy emailer, I just don't often need to send or receive large attachments.

      Google banks on the fact that very few people put lots of data into their emails, even if some people do crazy things like use gmail as a file store, it's still worth it to advertise that amount of space to the masses. It's basically just a marketing ploy. A successful (and useful to end users) ploy, but a marketing ploy none the less.

      However with a file storage service, people are far more inclined to actually utilize the space they are given. For example, I've got 5 gigs of space on Dropbox, and I'm already using 35% of it. Google will be less inclined to provide much more space for free than 5GB because more people are more inclined to actually use that space.

    12. Re:5 GB by nsebban · · Score: 1

      EchoFS is 30 GB, also free.

      --
      ____
      nico
      Nico-Live
    13. Re:5 GB by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      no monthly fee... always-on server... network connection

      Now one of those items doesn't fit well with the other two.

    14. Re:5 GB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would guess they are hoping you will buy more storage off them - if the prices are similar to how google currently sell storage it will be:

      20 GB - $5/yr
      80 GB - $20/yr
      200 GB - $50/yr
      400 GB - $100/yr
      1 TB - $256/yr
      2 TB - $512/yr
      4 TB - $1024/yr
      8 TB - $2048/yr
      16 TB - $4096/yr

    15. Re:5 GB by swillden · · Score: 1

      no monthly fee... always-on server... network connection

      Now one of those items doesn't fit well with the other two.

      Well, assuming you're going to have the network connection and server anyway, there's no contradiction.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    16. Re:5 GB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're living in a fantasy world.

    17. Re:5 GB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason they give so much extra space for gmail is because most people won't even use a tenth of that space.

      and...

      email (sans attachments) compresses extremely well... even with a 'typical' amount of binary attachments, the compression ratio of an email store is pretty impressive. e.g. my own 1.4gb thunderbird directory (portable, so that includes the program files) compresses down to 19% of its uncompressed size when backed up.

      word and some other commonly-attached filetypes also compress well...

      many binary attachments are simply resent (and often resented) forwards .. which they don't really need to keep a copy of for every single person that sends or receives a file.

      only those who use (or abuse) the service to store / archive massive amounts of unique previously-compressed files (zips, movies, mp3s, jpegs, etc) might actually cost more to provide service to than is made back via ads and other revenues.

    18. Re:5 GB by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Only 5 GB? Anyone else a little surprised by that?

      My gmail accounts have more space than that, and people have been writing browser extensions and apps for a while to leverage that as cloud storage. 5 GB is at the high end of current free offerings (it matches SugarSync and Box), but by no means revolutionary. You'd think Google, with their resources, would be offering a bit more, especially with their late entry into the game. I guess they can push the tie-ins to other services - like being able to send attachments in Gmail straight to your Google cloud storage. But other than that, what's the incentive, especially if already using another service?

      Easy - Google knows the utilization rate of Gmail is quite low. They can offer everyone 9+GB of mail storage knowing perhaps only 2% or so of users actually use that much and are actively bumping against that limit.

      With GDrive though, people will probably store a LOT of data on there because it's storage that's much more useful to people. So utilization of that would be much higher and maybe even use more storage than gmail.

    19. Re:5 GB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Today is the 7th GMail outage. Who in his right mind would trust those morons who cannot run a simple E-mail service?

    20. Re:5 GB by swillden · · Score: 1

      Today is the 7th GMail outage. Who in his right mind would trust those morons who cannot run a simple E-mail service?

      Umm, what does the volunteer Tahoe LAFS grid have to do with GMail?

      And, according to the dashboard (how many companies publish their service problems, with history, to the whole world?), GMail didn't have an outage, just a disruption. A fairly large one, as GMail disruptions go since it affected almost 10% of GMail users and lasted over an hour, but still hardly an "outage".

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  7. And after they scrape all that data by Nethead · · Score: 1

    And after they scrape all that data watch out for GooglePorn.

    --
    -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    1. Re:And after they scrape all that data by rrohbeck · · Score: 2

      The only questions here are
      - Can you easily create an anonymous account and
      - Can you make your files accessible to others?

    2. Re:And after they scrape all that data by Nethead · · Score: 1

      Not sure anonymous and Google go together. They may not have your street address, but they know what you fap to.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
  8. Can Google be trusted with so much Private Data? by dryriver · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Google already collects a huge amount of data on people with its search engine, Youtube (tracking what you watch), Gmail, Maps, Android OS and other services. Now they also want you to store important data on a Google Cloud-Drive? What happens when Google is served with a legal warrant stating that government has a right to access everything of yours that is on Google's servers? Its pretty stunning how much data of yours would become transparent at once: What you search for. What you write in emails. What you watch on Youtube. What you do with your Android tablet. And now also the data you store on Google's cloud-drive... Perhaps this is all by design? You are supposed to trust the Google brand with all your private data, until the day the government comes along, and demands to see years worth of your data, and - crucially - without you even knowing this is happening. For me, Google Cloud-drive is simply too many eggs in one basket. Sure, it could be useful for backing up some not terribly critical data, and then accessing that data from all sorts of different places when you are on the go. My gutfeeling tells me though that Google already knows more than enough about everyone, and that adding your non-internet data to its data collection is a step too far - too far in the wrong direction.

    --
    Why did the chicken cross the road? Because Elon Musk put an AI chip in its head.
  9. What's really interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows Skydrive offers 25GB and is integrated into Win 8.

    That seems like it blows G-Drive out of the water. I wonder why so many people try to ignore it.

    1. Re:What's really interesting by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      Probably because it requires Windows 8?

      I'm no slow adopter of new versions of Windows, but even I'm a bit weary of upgrading to Windows 8. I think Microsoft is taking too much focus away from what desktops are for and putting too much focus on tablets. I want my desktop to behave like a desktop, not a tablet, and even if I disable the whole Metro thing, there's certain changes that were made that I'm not comfortable with.

    2. Re:What's really interesting by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      Edit: I suppose I was misinformed about SkyDrive's availability. Appears it doesn't require Windows 8.

    3. Re:What's really interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oo! Another MS shill promoting skydrive (there's a lots about today).
      Skydrive is completely useless to most people due to file size and type limitations.

  10. Extremely Thin by DakotaSmith · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've got 50GB free at Box and 30GB free on EchoFS.com. Why should I care about 5GB? Just because it's Google?

    --
    Microsoft leads to Bluescreen; Bluescreen leads to downtime; downtime leads to suffering.
    1. Re:Extremely Thin by IANAAC · · Score: 1

      I've got 50GB free at Box and 30GB free on EchoFS.com. Why should I care about 5GB? Just because it's Google?

      Hey, I don't know why you've been modded down to oblivion, but thanks for mentioning EchoFS. I'd not heard of it before. It works great with davfs in Linux... something that is pretty difficult to find, at least with this amount of space.

    2. Re:Extremely Thin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was about to mention box.com. Anyone who has an Android device can install the box.com app and get 50GB. Also, Microsoft Skydrive offers 25GB for anyone.

      One of the nice things I like about box.com is it supports WebDAV, so I can access it just like another drive on my PC.

    3. Re:Extremely Thin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The 50GB at box are useless - as they don't offer a desktop application, you have to upload all the stuff via your web-browser... which is sooo 1999. And the their WebDAV implementation is just WebDAV in name... it's slow as heck and totally unreliable.

    4. Re:Extremely Thin by DaFallus · · Score: 1

      I've got 50GB free at Box and 30GB free on EchoFS.com. Why should I care about 5GB? Just because it's Google?

      To be fair, you most likely paid $20 for the extra 45 GB at Box and EchoFS doesn't have any synchronization tools other than setting it up as a network block device. Using EchoFS as a NBD sounds pretty cool, but I have no idea how I could set that up on my phone.

      --
      No one cares what your captcha was

      Houston TX, USA
    5. Re:Extremely Thin by Pigeon451 · · Score: 1

      How long have you been using echofs? I did a search and couldn't find any mention of people using it other than this thread.

    6. Re:Extremely Thin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Box.com originally offered 50GB for free to users of specific brands of phones. Now it's free for anyone using Android. It also supports WebDAV (which unlike some claim, works just fine), that means you can use whatever software you want to sync with it. Personally I use FreeFileSync and it works wonderfully.

    7. Re:Extremely Thin by DakotaSmith · · Score: 0

      The cool part is that the people at EchoFS are easy to work with. They converted my DAV share to SSH for no charge and in about fifteen minutes.

      --
      Microsoft leads to Bluescreen; Bluescreen leads to downtime; downtime leads to suffering.
    8. Re:Extremely Thin by DakotaSmith · · Score: 0

      There are a number of file managers on Android that can read a variety of network shares. I use FX File Explorer, and I have SSHFSes, Box, and two Windows shares configured.

      I also use FolderSync Lite to automatically mirror files. Though to be honest, with 30GB to 50GB storage to play with, I store a massive amount of data in the cloud and use the file manager apps to copy them to my Android when needed. I mostly do this with my ePub library since I'm keeping my music and videos with Google (30GB).

      --
      Microsoft leads to Bluescreen; Bluescreen leads to downtime; downtime leads to suffering.
    9. Re:Extremely Thin by DakotaSmith · · Score: 0

      The better part of a year. I'm extremely pleased, having had my account converted to SSHFS free of charge.

      However, unless EchoFS does something differently very soon, I think they're going the way of the Dodo Bird. They aren't marketing themselves well, and I expect services like Box.com to overtake them shortly.

      It's a pity, because they're very, very good. But if nobody knows about the service, they won't survive.

      Dakota Smith

      --
      Microsoft leads to Bluescreen; Bluescreen leads to downtime; downtime leads to suffering.
    10. Re:Extremely Thin by DakotaSmith · · Score: 0

      Box's DAVfs is only useless if you have an OS that doesn't speak DAV. I have mine configured via davfs2 under fuse, and it automounts when I enter the mount directory (using AutoFS).

      Of course, one needs a Linux distro to make it work ... ;)

      Dakota Smith

      --
      Microsoft leads to Bluescreen; Bluescreen leads to downtime; downtime leads to suffering.
  11. rsync.net by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I rather use rsync.net than trust my data to an advertising company.

    1. Re:rsync.net by Skapare · · Score: 3, Informative

      And you can secure it with encfs.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  12. MS SkyDrive by El+Rey · · Score: 3, Informative

    MS SkyDrive is 25GB for free and no hoops to jump through. They don't let you store large files though. Seems like they could do better than 5GB...

    1. Re:MS SkyDrive by Nimey · · Score: 1

      I expect Microsoft can handle giving that because they've got a smaller userbase, and who's really going to use 25GB?

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    2. Re:MS SkyDrive by El+Rey · · Score: 1

      I use it as a free offsite backup for a non-profit I volunteer with. They don't have any large files and I think the drive in the ancient box they are using is only 30GB total anyway... Free. Works well enough for their needs.

    3. Re:MS SkyDrive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you can only upload a whopping 100MB of data at a time. What a piece of shit.

    4. Re:MS SkyDrive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I expect Microsoft can handle giving that because they've got a smaller userbase, and who's really going to use 25GB with a 100mb file limit?

      ftfy.

    5. Re:MS SkyDrive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No large files sounds like a 'hoop' to me.

  13. Interesting that Google Drive starts at 5GB? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Ubuntu One has been offering 5 GB for free for a little while now, as well, so I'm not sure what could be so notable about Google doing the same. I think a free 5 GB to start with is becoming a standard amount for these services.

  14. Google is competing with Microsoft Mesh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot is so stupid these days.

    Google is competing with Microsoft Mesh, which gives away 5GB of storage too. Duh....

  15. Why not to just buy Dropbox, Inc.? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    :-) I guess, it would result in abandonment of service by the current Dropbox users, who use it thinking that Dropbox Inc. doesn't have interest in mining their data.

  16. Docs and gmail by netsavior · · Score: 1

    I'll be honest, as a wannabe author my backup solution involves storing on multiple computers AND gmailing myself copies as lazy-man incremental backups. I am not exactly sure what I would use a cloud drive for, since I already use gmail(and to a lesser extent docs) that way. One really sweet thing is that it is already integrated into my smart phone as-is, because emails with attachments already work there.

    I think there IS a consumer gap as far as sharing files bigger than an email attachment without torrent or the like. XKCD summed it up nicely but it seems like nobody has figured out how to do it without going to jail. I am just not quite sure what cloud storage can do (that docs and gmail doesn't, that is legal) without some stupid hardware artificially making it a necessity (e.g. iPad and Kindle Fire omitting storage options)

    1. Re:Docs and gmail by WrecklessSandwich · · Score: 1

      I think there IS a consumer gap as far as sharing files bigger than an email attachment without torrent or the like. XKCD summed it up nicely but it seems like nobody has figured out how to do it without going to jail. I am just not quite sure what cloud storage can do (that docs and gmail doesn't, that is legal) without some stupid hardware artificially making it a necessity (e.g. iPad and Kindle Fire omitting storage options)

      Dropbox actually solved this quite nicely. When you register an account, there's a "Public" folder (you can share other folders as well, only Public is shared by default). You can send anyone a download link to any file in the Public folder. I recently had to send a ~200MB RAR archive to several different people in another city. I copied it into my Dropbox/Public folder on my hard drive, waited for it to finish uploading, and right clicked on it in Explorer and there was a "Copy public link" button -- you can get the same URL by logging into your account on the Dropbox website. I sent my colleagues the URL and that was that, no hassle at all.

      I can't speak for Spideroak, SkyDrive, etc. as I have not tried them. A cursory look at Spideroak indicates that it has a similar feature, but with much tighter access control capabilities. As far as I can tell the only security to Dropbox public sharing is that you need the download URL, which can obviously get passed around. The public URL for the aforementioned 200MB RAR has not changed in the past... almost a month since I uploaded it, so I doubt the URL has any kind of expiration date.

  17. G:\ In use. by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 3, Funny

    I already have a G: drive, can we remap it to another drive letter?

    1. Re:G:\ In use. by Bitmanhome · · Score: 1

      The drive is not called "G:", it's called "Google:". Only works on Amiga.

      --
      Not that this wasn't entirely predictable.
  18. The internet wants to know ... by Skapare · · Score: 1

    ... can I migrate my megauploads?

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  19. Skydrive/Dropbox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't really see a reason to move to this (unless I'm heavily into Android, which I no longer am). Dropbox works, and I have 9GB free on that. Skydrive gives me 25GB free and I don't have nearly as many privacy concerns or questions about "beta" products.

  20. The question is... by joh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Will Google have native clients for Windows, Linux, OS X, iOS, Android and Symbian that will offer real file system integration?

    Or is that just a web drive you have to up- and download data from?

    I'm asking because I'm using Dropbox in a business environment in which I export a Samba share from a Linux server to Dropbox which gets synced to a bunch of clients on half a dozen of very different devices running on Windows, Mac OS, Linux, Android and iOS and all of this works just fine. Having 5 GB instead of 2 GB for free is not much of an advantage if there is no system integration to speak of and exactly this has always been a problem with Google. Hey, they even have a hard time to get IMAP right.

    1. Re:The question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google's idea of a 'native client' is having the Chrome browser available on relevant platforms, and requiring that the service in question be used with Chrome (and now Google+!) to get the full functionality out of it.

    2. Re:The question is... by Rich0 · · Score: 2

      Yup, and the Chrome browser is practically an OS at the rate it is going. 80% of the source code is stuff that is probably already on your hard drive if you use linux, but which will now be loaded a second time in RAM because Google doesn't believe in dynamic linking...

    3. Re:The question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google Drive for Linux will obviously be implemented as a kernel module with a gdrive file system with best performance possible.

    4. Re:The question is... by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      which will now be loaded a second time in RAM because Google doesn't believe in dynamic linking.

      Run it in a VM and let the hypervisor automatically dedup identical memory blocks.

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
  21. Question before I sign up by Tokolosh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is my data stored in the US?

    Does the US government claim to have jurisdiction over my data? (I think I know the answer to this one).

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    1. Re:Question before I sign up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is my data stored in the US?

      Doesn't matter...

      Does the US government claim to have jurisdiction over my data? (I think I know the answer to this one).

      Of course they do (and you already knew that).

    2. Re:Question before I sign up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, they do claim jurisdiction anywhere they can drop a bomb or offer enough other incentives.

      That leaves you with North Korea,China, and The magic kingdom.

    3. Re:Question before I sign up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is my data stored in the US?

      Does the US government claim to have jurisdiction over my data? (I think I know the answer to this one).

      As long as it is a US company providing the service (e.g., Google), the US claims jurisdiction over data stored anywhere in the world by that company:

      Link

  22. You can have 10 GB google storage here instantly by yooy · · Score: 1

    http://sr71.net/projects/gmailfs/ Should also be possible to just mount it via cryptoloop for encryption.

  23. Gmail Drive Shell Extention by flogger · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.viksoe.dk/code/gmail.htm Been in use for a long time... If this is as easy to use as Dropbox and as easy to share as that or as easy as google docs, then sign me up.

    --
    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
    "First things first -- but not necessarily in that order"
    -- The Doctor, "Doctor
  24. Years too late Google by Snaller · · Score: 2

    After you have been forcing G+ on everybody I'm never going to use any of your new services.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    1. Re:Years too late Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After you have been forcing G+ on everybody..

      As in the defintion of 'forced' that means 'not forced at all', since no-one *has* to have a Google account?

  25. incredible google suppremacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Megaupload left a big hole in the clouding business, and google is going to get it...

    think about this: google owned utube, then going to own clouding suppremacy, then what???

    Google is like microsoft in its time: they want to rule all the internet...and no one is going to stop them.

  26. Something to consider before you jump into this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  27. Re:Can Google be trusted with so much Private Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    First, I don't get this paranoia about "Google knows everything about you!". Even if it's true, I don't really see how it matters for an average Joe like me. Somebody has to elaborate _how_ it's bad, otherwise it's on "But they know you watch porn!" level - let them, I hope they like midget tranny porn. You (or someone) really should elaborate on this sometime.

    Second, why single out Google? If you're so paranoid, a) don't let single bit leave your PC unencrypted, b) don't share single bit with anyone. Also, browse all the web through anonymous VPN proxies, change them often, and so on, and so on.

    Right now, every second site includes a dozen social media buttons, a few analytics scripts, some ad scripts and sticks "We reserve the right to sell your soul^W^W^Wshare anonymized untrackable cross-our-heart-unidentifiable (honest) usage data with 3rd party"

  28. NDrive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Japan I use NDrive. Free 30 Gig of free storage with no need to do stupid upgrade deals like Dropbox. Maps a drive on your PC to the cloud so you can drag and drop files or just save them directly to the cloud. Has a smartphone client with a built in media player, so you can stream your own movies and music to your phone. I'm pretty sure people outside Japan could register, although the cloud storage servers are probably located here, and you'd need to speak Japanese to do the signup (or use translation software).

    Makes Google's 5 Gigs look a bit diminutive.

  29. Ahhh 1997 by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    when geocities, freeyellow, angelfire and etc... offering 10mb was plenty.

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
    1. Re:Ahhh 1997 by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      Man, thinking back... I remember when Geocities offered a whopping 2 megs of storage, and then Angelfire came around, boasting an amazing 5 megs. When Geocities matched the 5 meg space, Angelfire upgraded to 10 megs. Good times.

  30. No sync for that 25GB SkyDrive! by zaimoglu · · Score: 5, Informative

    Microsoft has got it all wrong with the SkyDrive. Firstly, there are TWO DIFFERENT services: (1) SkyDrive gives you 25GB of free cloud space but WITHOUT synchronization capabilities, so you need to manually keep track of your files, (2) a synchronization service that goes by the name of Live SkyDrive or LiveMesh, with only 5GB space. This second service is the one that can truly be compared to Dropbox. The problems with SkyDrive are not limited to this mind boggling confusion. The 25GB service does not allow you to upload folders. You MUST manually create your folders and only then can you upload your files, though you can select more than one file at this stage. Microsoft really expects you to carefully examine your directory tree and create folders manually!

    1. Re:No sync for that 25GB SkyDrive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 25GB service does not allow you to upload folders. You MUST manually create your folders and only then can you upload your files, though you can select more than one file at this stage. Microsoft really expects you to carefully examine your directory tree and create folders manually!

      I just threw up a little in my mouth

  31. All your data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    are belong to us

  32. Re:Can Google be trusted with so much Private Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice work, google employee.

    , I don't really see how it matters for an average Joe like me.

    Because no single private company should have a consolidated large corpus of personal data that it sells or profiles to other private companies. Because the "let someone eavesdrop on all my activities because I have nothing to hide" is retarded. If I were an employer.. I would pay Google to give me personal data on all my employees.. I would fire employees (1) about to get pregnant.. (2) who do drugs (3) who are wasting their work hours surfing (4) who have health issues .. etc.

    Second, why single out Google?

    Because the story is about google.

    If you're so paranoid

    he is not paranoid. he doesn't want to send his data to a giant ad company. whats so hard to understand about that?

  33. Re:Can Google be trusted with so much Private Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice work, google employee.

    Where do I get my cheque? There seems to be nothing in my mail :(

    Because the story is about google.

    he is not paranoid. he doesn't want to send his data to a giant ad company. whats so hard to understand about that?

    But he's okay with sending his data to smaller ad companies and non-ad companies who collect personal data? Here, because:

    Because no single private company should have a consolidated large corpus of personal data that it sells or profiles to other private companies. Because the "let someone eavesdrop on all my activities because I have nothing to hide" is retarded.

    See my second point. Sorry to break your fragile world, but there is not a "single private company", but a lot of private companies that are willing and doing all they can to consolidate a large corpus of personal data. Any data you send unencrypted to any website is potentially mined by someone - and Google is just one of those someones.

    If you don't like it, you've got two choices - be paranoid (in a positive sense) and don't give anyone possibility to collect it, or just realize that you've already left a huge trace all over the web and the reason it didn't impact your life is because *you're not fucking important*! But do go on mumbling everywhere how evil Google/Facebook/MS knows where you live and knows your dog's favourite pet food, and this is terrible. Not paranoid, no siree.

    Oh, and:

    If I were an employer.. I would pay Google to give me personal data on all my employees.. I would fire employees (1) about to get pregnant.. (2) who do drugs (3) who are wasting their work hours surfing (4) who have health issues .. etc.

    You would, but Google doesn't sell this. They sell ad views. But thank you for playing.

  34. Re:Can Google be trusted with so much Private Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where do I get my cheque? There seems to be nothing in my mail :(

    So you're a whore for google who doesn't get paid. Thats troubling in a different way..

    If you don't like it, you've got two choices

    I have many choices. My brain isnt limited by what google's marketing department tells me.

    But he's okay with sending his data to smaller ad companies and non-ad companies who collect personal data?

    no. i am not okay with that.

    reason it didn't impact your life is because *you're not fucking important*

    Stop your anti-privacy propoganda. nobody except sheep for ad companies and governments are going to buy your argument.

    You would, but Google doesn't sell this

    They do. You are a really bad liar, especially when its all out in the open.

    https://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/privacy/

    We will share personal information with companies, organizations or individuals outside of Google when we have your consent to do so. We require opt-in consent for the sharing of any sensitive personal information.

    [Note: Opt-in is only required for "sensitive personal information" all other kinds of personal information is shared if they want to.]

    We provide personal information to our affiliates or other trusted businesses or persons to process it for us, based on our instructions and in compliance with our Privacy Policy and any other appropriate confidentiality and security measures.

    We may share aggregated, non-personally identifiable information publicly and with our partners – like publishers, advertisers or connected sites. For example, we may share information publicly to show trends about the general use of our services.

  35. Buy Dropbox by XrayJunkie · · Score: 1

    I guess it will end this way ... or facebook will do it.

  36. Re:Can Google be trusted with so much Private Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, I see you're too dense to understand what I tell you, but I'll repeat one last time: you either get in full privacy mode (I hope you posted your comment with cookies, JS and external images turned off, right?), or you understand there's possibility of someone watching your every step and live on. Getting stuck on "but if I don't show it to Google directly - it's ok" is strange.

    Oh, and you really suck at reading. What are you, employer, going to buy when a) We will share personal information with companies, organizations or individuals outside of Google when we have your consent to do so" [Note: that's only two kinds: personal and non-personally identifiable. One requires consent, other doesn't], b) "We provide personal information to our affiliates or other trusted businesses or persons to process it for us, based on our instructions and in compliance with our Privacy Policy and any other appropriate confidentiality and security measures.", and c) "We may share aggregated, non-personally identifiable information publicly and with our partners". So, which ones are you, evil employer, gonna get for arbitrary employees?

  37. Since lots of people are posting alternatives... by olau · · Score: 1

    ... one of them is Hostigation. They have a relatively inexpensive backup plan, 0.04 USD per GB storage per month allocated in 30 GB chunks.

    So it's not free, but there's no magic in it either. You get your own little Debian VPS so you can use rsync or whatever you fancy. It's not really redundant, though, so if the server goes down for good, you'll have to reupload the data.

  38. Google, do it this way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Google, this is how you implement a cloud drive CORRECTLY:

    1. Offer more initial storage space than all of the competitors for FREE
    2. Offer additional storage space far more cheaply, than your competitors - you already do this for Google Apps, you have a good start.
    3. Provide cross-platform desktop and mobile apps, with consistent interfaces, that provide "DropBox" light functionality, for FREE
    4. Merge the Google Apps and Picasa (and anything of service's) storage spaces into one location.
    5. Do not put a small, arbitrary limit of file size, or any other limits, such as spreadsheet row/column restrictions

    You are close to this already:

    Actual:
    1. DropBox offers more space than Google Apps, initially
    2. You already do this, for pennies. It's far cheaper than DropBox.
    3. Insync provides a nice beta app for this functionality. However, the mobile apps, coming in May, will not be free.
    4. I hope this will happen when you implement GDrive. Please.
    5. Only the spreadsheet limitation exists, afaik.

    In conclusion, Google, you are very close to this functionality. It would take hardly any effort to have a complete solution.

  39. No, they're not by daboochmeister · · Score: 1
    You're ignoring that Google will be excluding from the storage quota for GDrive:
    • GMail storage (7 GB free)
    • Google Docs usage (not sure of amt free, but it's decent for docs)
    • Picasa picture/video storage (10GB free, right?)
    • Google Music (20K songs free - at 5MB/song, that's 100GB)

    SkyDrive probably has one or two similar exclusions, but I doubt in aggregate that it exceeds what Google is providing free.

    --
    "Ahh! I see you're in that indeterminate Schrodinger state where - oh, uh ... never mind." Dave Bucci
    1. Re:No, they're not by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      I'm at 1GB for Picassa, I would love to get 10GB. Maybe it's because it is part of a custom domain...

  40. Adrive free 50 gigs by Sami+Lehtinen · · Score: 1

    Adrive.com has offer 50 gigs for years. Therefore 5 gigs for free is not enough, unless some other features are exceptionally good.

  41. OG GOD THE FAT AMERICANS STRIKE BACK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    now they will be hogging the bandwidth to sync their stupid large video file collections which could instead be used to give for free to developing countries to electronify the classrooms with internet, shame

  42. Bitch, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bitch, please. I don't get out of bed in the morning for anything less than 25GB of free storage.

    .