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Storage Networks

Dropbox Improvements End a Cloudy Week

Dropbox Improvements End a Cloudy Week
April 27, 2012 11:12AM

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Dropbox is adding the ability for its users to share files with even non-Dropboxers, via a link, and to upload a batch of photos simply by connecting a phone or camera. Dropbox has added special photo and video viewing options. And if auto-uploading is used, the Dropbox storage limit is increased by 500 MB each time up to an additional 5 GB.

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With cloud Relevant Products/Services services moving quickly, veteran service Dropbox has unveiled several updates. The enhancements come on the heels of announcements in recent days about the launch of Google Drive, a new API for Box.com, and a new version of Microsoft Relevant Products/Services's SkyDrive.

Dropbox is adding the ability for its users to share files with even non-Dropboxers, via a link. It is also unveiling Dropbox 1.40 for Windows, Mac, and Linux, which allows files to be batch-transferred.

Additional 3 GB

With 1.40, users can also simply connect a phone, camera, tablets, or SD card, and Dropbox will automatically offer to upload all of the photos and videos to the Dropbox account.

Uploaded images can be seen as thumbnails and displayed by month, in a Dropbox Photos page. These uploading features had previously been available only for Android Relevant Products/Services devices, and are now available for computers.

To encourage usage, Dropbox will increase the user's free storage limit of 2GB by 500MB each time auto-uploading is used, up to an additional 3 GB. The additional storage is only available for camera uploads, but is available permanently.

This total of 5 GB parallels the free storage allowed on the newly announced Google Drive service, as well as the amounts available on Box.com and Sugar Sync. Microsoft's SkyDrive's free limit is now 7 GB, down from the initial 25 GB.

Dropbox's upgrades are the latest volley in the cloud wars, as rival services emerge and up the ante. On Monday, Microsoft announced new options for personal cloud storage on the latest version of its SkyDrive service. The options include new apps Relevant Products/Services for storage and device connection, and the ability to grab a file from a Windows PC Relevant Products/Services via the cloud.

'All About Collaboration'

On Tuesday, Google announced its Google Drive, followed a couple of days later by the release of version 2 of Box.com's enterprise Relevant Products/Services-oriented OneCloud, plus the announcement of a variety of new OneCloud partners.

Consumer and enterprise skies are full of clouds these days, as such services are becoming common components of apps, platforms, and devices.

Samsung, for instance, is expected to announce its S-Cloud service on May 3, when it unveils its new Galaxy smartphone. There's also Apple's iCloud, Amazon Relevant Products/Services's Cloud Drive, and device manufacturers are beginning to offer cloud services as an added-value, such as HTC and Asus for some of their products. Meanwhile, the open-source cloud operating system OpenStack has recently been gaining stream, which could propel cloud services.

We asked Current Analysis' Brad Shimmin if he saw many of these new services as genuine platforms. Shimmin replied that, in his definition, a platform requires "an execution environment, developer tools, and an API," and that most of the cloud services are beginning to meet that definition.

The cloud services, Shimmin said, have moved far beyond file-sharing and storage, and "are now all about collaboration Relevant Products/Services." He added that the rise and enhancement of these services is "the realignment of something that was broken by the quick rise of mobility," namely, the ability to easily collaborate with fellow workers.

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Mike Lazarus:

Posted: 2012-04-28 @ 7:31am PT
Dropbox also gives away extra storage when you refer new users and promo more when they released the iOS and Android versions. I have 16.5GB free on Dropbox now. Surprising Google started small when you think that the reason GMail became popular was the massive storage they gave compared to other free emails at the time.

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