Bino,
I sorta agree. U/D speed at the plug has always been the issue. You have to PAY to PLAY. I have watched as our members upgraded to faster speeds over the years. A member of this conundrum is chronically willing to tell me I remain lame at 50mbps (sync). I chuckle; and pay my bill. One day that person will be 'retired' and no longer subject to his corporate donor, or, big paycheck. No matter. I do so remember dial-up. I still have my pair of Courier Modems (just in case)!
Good Point.
Best,
Duncan


On 03/30/2011 17:13, Bino Gopal wrote:
Really?  Excepy for the lack of decent upload speeds-have you tried uploading 
5GB all at once to share something with a friend...not until 10+ Mbps is the 
easily accessible standard will we see the end of USB flash drives methinks! :P


Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 09:40:37 -0400
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [H] $1000 / yr for 1TB of Cloud?

The cloud drive service is targeted at consumers, rather than
businesses.  So, how many consumers would be willing to spend $1000 / yr
for 1 TB of off-line backup in these days of super dirt cheap TBs and
still slow upload speeds?

Interestingly, you can get 5GB from Amazon, 5 GB from SugarSync, and 2
GB from Dropbox without doing anything beyond opening an account.  For
short term projects, that's plenty of cloud storage.  It's a boom for
anyone who takes work between multiple locations.  The end of the
thumb/flash drive.

On 3/30/2011 7:16 AM, Stan Zaske wrote:
Just saw this over at HardOCP:

https://www.amazon.com/clouddrive/learnmore


On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 20:51:38 -0500, Winterlight
<[email protected]>  wrote:

small business, like medical corporations, Law firms, Architectural,
Development, companies ...any that makes a lot of money and doesn't
have a dedicated IT department. Being able to auto backup, off site,
incrementaly, saftly, with a reliable source for a grand a year is a
bargain

At 06:02 PM 3/29/2011, you wrote:
This seems weird to me. Amazon is offering 1TB of cloud for $1000/yr.
So, you can keep your stuff backed up&  sync'ed for $1000/yr.  Hehe.
Who exactly is going to go for this?  For way less than that, I can
get several 1TB HDs and cycle backup drives to/from the office or
even a safe in the PO.  And who has fast enough upload speeds to
make backing this data up online feasible?

While I like using the cloud, I can't see this model.  Well, maybe
it would work for all new stuff you create starting today. At that
rate, the backups would be small and gradual.

Do you guys think we will all come to depend on the cloud for
backing up all our data?  Does it make sense for us data hogs?  Hey,
I know it doesn't make sense for some of YOU data hogs! :)

                                        

Reply via email to