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Google Drive: When Clouds Jump On A Bandwagon

The center of our digital lives soon will no longer be the personal computer, but the personal cloud.

Is it possible for clouds to have a bandwagon? It sure seemed as if there were a lot of them jumping on a bandwagon over the last several days, and Google was driving it.

The tech giant finally launched its Google Drive last week, after rumors for several years that it would be getting into the cloud-computing business. That had all kinds of cloud storage and application providers coming out with announcements of their own, not wanting to be lost in the fog.

Microsoft even managed to make an announcement a day ahead of Google about "improvements" to its SkyDrive service that actually amounted to a cut in the amount of storage space offered free to new users, from 25 GB down to 7 GB—still more than Google's 5 GB, but a cut nonetheless. To be fair, there were improvements in SkyDrive's functionality and interoperability, and the cut likely was meant mainly to bring Microsoft's service more in line with other providers.

Besides Google and Microsoft, there have been announcements or leaks over the last several days by Dropbox, Box.com, Hewlett-Packard, Samsung and LG. Some of the other players include Amazon's Cloud Drive, Apple's iCloud and Dropbox rival SugarSync. Mobile-device vendors HTC and Asus are, like Samsung and LG, also in the cloud business, as an added value to promote their smartphones and tablets.

Typically these work on a PC with an app that creates a special folder which, when a user drops a file into it, is synced to cloud storage and to any other devices registered to that account, whether another PC, a smartphone or tablet. Usually there are iPhone and/or Android apps for easily accessing the cloud through a mobile device.

Considering there had been speculation about Google getting into the business for four or five years, Google Drive seems a remarkably average offering, with price being its main selling point compared with a service like Dropbox, which helped define the category. Google Drive offers five gigabytes of free storage, with upgrades to 25 GB for $2.99 a month or 100 GB for $4.99.

And just what is that category? Wikipedia defines cloud computing as "a metaphor used by Technology or IT Services companies for the delivery of computing requirements as a service to a heterogeneous community of end-recipients."

If you don't have the foggiest notion of what that means, let's try it this way: It's taking a function usually performed by your computer and moving it instead to a server off in some nebulous location somewhere, in a cloud.

So Google Docs or Apple iWork or Microsoft Office 365 are web-based cloud applications that take the place of productivity suites like Microsoft Office that otherwise would reside on your computer. Netflix or iTunes videos or Amazon Instant Streaming are cloud replacements for your DVD or Blu-ray player.

The hot offering currently is storage, moving music, photos, videos or work documents to a cloud drive instead of your computer's hard drive. Increasingly, cloud storage and cloud applications are linked, so files stored on Google Drive or Apple's iCloud can be opened and worked in Google Docs or Apple iWork.

That in fact may be Google Drive's biggest advantage, its integration. If you use Gmail, soon you'll be able to save or send attachments directly to and from Google Drive. Google supports viewing or modifying up to 30 different file types, so, for instance, you can view a native Adobe Photoshop file in your web browser even though you don't have Photoshop installed on your computer.

For a lot of everyday work, Google and other providers are making your home computer barely relevant – you only need to be able to access the web, and all the other computing work can be done through an app launched within a browser.

Which is partly the point. Much of what is driving the explosion in cloud computing, besides lower prices for storage, is the explosion in mobile devices. What started as services aimed at being able to access work files on a computer at home or on the road now are directed at enabling smartphones and tablets, with their limited storage and horsepower, to do things for which we used to need a computer.

"Explosion" is not used lightly to describe cloud computing's growth. Leading technology-research firm Gartner predicts in a new report that by 2014, the "personal cloud" will replace the "personal computer" as the center of most digital interactions. By 2015, cloud services will be on 90 percent of personal technology devices, whether PC, smartphone, tablet or even smart TV. Consumers will be able to store, connect, stream or synchronize content across any of those platforms and at different locations.

It's the decline of one PC and the rise of another, the personal cloud.

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Craig Maxwell May 19, 2013 at 05:10 pm
That's the gist of it, both of you. Obama differs from his predecessors not in degree but inRead More kind--qualitatively, not quantitatively. He is our first, true-blue presidential ideologue.
Status Quo May 19, 2013 at 11:15 am
That is correct 'Bat', pathetic attempts by followers of the present charlatan President - keepRead More trying to make, this some sordidly type of "racist" issue... wholly non-existent. In other words, affixing blame in search of a problem, for perceived political gain. The fact is, our President Barack Obama is a bad manager, hiring lousy managers in positions demanding excellence, affording no quarter for ineptitude and deceit! Promotion of figures and public servants as reward for ineptitude, should be punished by laws in-place and not shuffled around to administer more egregious miss-management. Lying to Americans has been perpetrated, by whom is in need of the reveal. The facts are inconsistent with, what has been revealed thus far. On the Muslim issue of the President's proclivity for apologies, it is appeasement at the least and inherent bowing to outrageous power at worst. The optics(hate that word in politics), are not good for America.
Batman May 19, 2013 at 10:36 am
Face it folks, you elected the wrong guy, twice. John Mc Cain is not that impressive, Mitt Romney isRead More a little better, but both of them are leaps and bounds above Mr Obama. At least they are both Americans. Questions have been raised about Obama's place of birth. Where he was born is not the issue. The issue is he is not one of us.
Debra Gilly May 21, 2013 at 08:51 am
Outrageous!
Status Quo May 19, 2013 at 11:18 am
'Bat'... At great individual cost, to be passed on to the consumer.
Batman May 18, 2013 at 04:02 pm
Perhaps the IRS is now in the identity theft business.
Things I Learned May 18, 2013 at 02:56 pm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_storm_of_1859#Carrington_Super_Flare
Things I Learned May 18, 2013 at 02:55 pm
http://www.space.com/21205-powerful-solar-flare-earth-fallout.html?cmpid=514648
Things I Learned May 18, 2013 at 02:54 pm
"A huge explosion on the sun will deal Earth a glancing blow today (May 17) but should not poseRead More a threat to the planet, scientists say. The sun storm erupted late Tuesday (May 14) during a powerful solar flare — the fourth unleashed by a single sunspot in just 48 hours — and hurled a massive cloud of charged particles out into space at millions of miles an hour."
Status Quo May 19, 2013 at 10:34 am
Why yes 'TIL', I do remember a more vibrant. lively and robust Patch site in the region! Now theRead More Mommy Bloggers are happy, happy, happy*. Patch may or may not be getting what they want, but the tourist rag they are producing is fun for the Mommy Bloggers - they adapt so well. In the early few days of the "transition"... I had prepared comments on positives and negatives, as well suggestions to make San Diego region Patch workable... all for naught and logical lack of interest. Recently... voices of the Grape Nuts... on the left side have called oppositional views "unpatriotic"... though discordant, it isn't like people were allowed to die without expedient help or laws being abridged, abrogated or circumvented. Cry's of "slander" are incorrect, but doesn't prevent those more discordant voices from uttering the tones. I remember when Free Speech reigned in America 'TIL'... I do? Sure the chicks were nice... until they aren't. *ala Phil Robertson
Komfort May 17, 2013 at 03:01 pm
Komfort May 17, 2013 at 02:22 pm
I used to come here for the chicks.
Craig Maxwell May 15, 2013 at 10:35 am
Just imagine how much tax-payer money's been blown on Art's drinking junkets over the last quarterRead More century (and how many sidewalks have been soiled).
Linda McCreight May 16, 2013 at 09:06 am
Rides4Neighbors is a great service. Because I work and travel a lot I cannot always get my motherRead More to her appointments and the folks at Rides4Neighbors are always so helpful and my mom really praises the drivers for their help and friendliness.
JWatson April 20, 2013 at 10:38 am
Mark, they were making that U-Turn to drop off their elementary school children in the red zoneRead More anyway....so the no U-Turn sign kills two birds with one stone: no bad U-Turns + no parking in the red zone. And, we are talking about elementary school children, so safety should have been all those parents first priority.
Mark Gregory Elliott April 18, 2013 at 03:12 pm
It is good to narrow the streets. Pedestrians are road kill in San Diego County. And if drivers doRead More not realize there is not enough room to make a U-turn, they need to retake the driving test instead of going over the curb. This is not rocket science people.
Komfort April 21, 2013 at 12:38 pm
Did S(he) tell you what was "shoddy" about his helping women with their choice?
Stuart Strenger April 20, 2013 at 02:48 pm
I've talked to God, and (S)he definitely supports a woman's right to choose whether she remainsRead More pregnant or not but disapproves of the shoddy way Dr. Gosnell ran his clinic. Surely you see the distinction as well. Medical malpractice is malpractice from any religious or ethical position. By the way, God also said (S)he supports gay marriage.
Komfort April 20, 2013 at 10:51 am
What does your God say about Kermit Gosnell and a woman's right to choose?