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SearchWin2000.com: David Strom's Win2000 Productivity Tool Shed 
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Quick reviews of Win2000/NT-compatible software

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"Internet file storage is worth the price"
By David Strom

Category: Online file storage
Name of tool: My Docs Online
Company name: My Docs Online, Inc.
Price: $25 to $310 per year, depending on the amount of storage
needed
URL: www.mydocsonline.com
Windows platforms supported: 2000, Me, 98, NT
Quick description: Online shared file storage that is secure and
simple.

Strom-meter:
**** = Very cool, very useful

Key features:

Pros:
Upload and download files with a Web browser or using Window's Web
folders options.

Cons:
While competitors offer free services, this one is worth the price.

Description:
When I first heard about the various services that offered free file
storage on the Internet, I thought it was a great idea. These
services are basically a hard disk in the sky; one that you can
connect to via a Web browser from anywhere on the planet and keep
your most critical files safe and secure. For enterprise users who do
a lot of traveling and don't want the hassles of a Virtual Private
Network or saving their files to floppies, these services make a lot
of sense. And for whatever sized business you are in, they offer a
convenient and simple mechanism for providing off-site storage in
case something catastrophic happens to your office.

Over the years, a number of companies offer this service, including
Xdrive, Driveway.com, iDrive.com, Punchnetworks.com and Visto's
Netdrive.com. But the one I keep using is MyDocsOnline.com. Despite
its unwieldly name, the site is the best of the bunch. The way all of
these services work is simple. You set up an account user name and
password using their Web site. Then you login to the site and begin
uploading and downloading files via your Web browser. With MyDocs you
also get integration with Windows Web folders so you can view your
Internet-based files using Explorer in much the same way that you
view your local files and folders. (The Web site has clear
instruction on how to enable this option with either a recent version
of IE v5, Office 2000 or by using Windows 2000.)

MyDocs (and some of its competitors) offer additional ways that you
can access your files through Web-enabled cell phones and other PDA
devices. The company also supports AvantGo channels and OmniSky
wireless Web access from Palms and Windows CE devices. This is nice,
but not something that I have used much. Usually when I need a file,
I need it on a "real" PC and want to work on it with the full
complement of software such as Microsoft Office. Still, if you have
to email someone a document, you can make use of this feature to send
it from your MyDocs account via your phone, which is pretty cool.

The advantage of MyDocs is that you don't need any additional
software on a standard PC to grab your files from the Internet. Some
early Internet file hosting services required special clients or
pieces of software to work with their systems. I find the extra
software to be an obstacle, especially when I'm on the road and at a
borrowed PC and don't wish to start messing with its configuration.
MyDocs does offer a special client using TeamStream's software, but
you don't have to use it.

Another nice feature about MyDocs is that you can upload different
versions of the same file with the same name. The service
automatically keeps track of the timestamp on the file, so you can
sort out which version is the most current. That makes it extra nice.

The disadvantage is that MyDocs is no longer a free service. You'll
have to pay anywhere from $25 a year on up, depending on how much
storage you want to purchase. This seems fair, given that you are
getting something of value and you don't have to deal with pages that
are cluttered with ads, as is the case with some competitors.

Another downside to Internet file storage is reliability, and I am
talking about corporate rather than the data networking kind. Given
that these companies are in a very threatened part of the market
(Driveway closed its doors earlier this year), you have a legitimate
right to be concerned about what may to happen to your data. It would
also probably be wise to have more than one backup of your files --
and not rely on MyDocs (or anyone else) exclusively to store the only
copies of your precious documents. That is just good business
practice. Of course, it could get confusing to remember which site
has the most recent copy of your files.

All in all, MyDocs is a great service, and one well worth the small
yearly fee.

Strom-meter key:
**** = Very cool, very useful
*** = Hey, not bad. One notch below very cool
** = A tad shaky to install and use but has some value.
* = Don't waste your time. Minimal real value.

Bio: David Strom is president of his own consulting firm in Port
Washington, NY. He has tested hundreds of computer products over the
past two decades working as a computer journalist, consultant, and
corporate IT manager. Since 1995 he has written a weekly series of
essays on web technologies and marketing called Web Informant. You
can send him email at mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED].
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