Google Drive, Google's cloud storage service, is finally here, and it's no surprise that the competition is prepared after years of rumors.
Cloud storage services such as Dropbox and Microsoft's Skydrive have been adding new features ahead of the Google Drive launch, and I've been getting anticipatory e-mails from other competitors, reminding me of their existence, for weeks now.
So how do all these online storage services compared to the new Google Drive? We've put together a chart covering all the big features. Here are some of the highlights:
- SkyDrive offers the most free storage at 7GB, and users who signed up before April 22 can get 25 GB free for a limited time.
- Google Drive undercuts all of its competitors on monthly pricing, but Microsoft's Skydrive--which doesn't offer monthly pricing-- is cheaper on an annual basis.
- SugarSync is the only service that can sync to any local file folder, but SkyDrive allows access to an entire remote Windows PC using two-step authentication.
- Watch out for file size limits. SugarSync doesn't have any limits, and Google Drive's 10GB is much more generous than other services.
- Web apps, public link sharing, and private file sharing are table stakes at this point.
- The offerings from Google and Microsoft have their downsides: Neither one supports the other's mobile platform.
Of course, comparison charts won't tell you everything you need to know. You might, for example, prefer Dropbox because a lot of other people are using it, or Google Drive because you already use lots of other Google services and want to tie in cloud storage. Use the feature comparisons as a baseline, and then find the cloud storage service that's right for you.
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Comments
Gary said: I just tested Sky Drive from my hotmail account and got free upgrade to 25GB created and saved a word doc all online Then went to my Gmail to test Google drive only to be informed it was not yetavailablebut registered to be notified
Colin said: Weve put together a chart covering all the big featuresIm sorry but I cannot see any link to this chart you mentionCan you help
Maccyroo said: When you say that only users that signed up before April 22ndget 25GB on SkyDrive for a limited time what happens to the stored data if you have been using SkyDrive for several years I have nearly 20GB of important files stored in my SkyDrive account which I opened over24 months ago I havent had any contact from Microsoft on my Windows Live email to say that I am going to have to start paying a fee or else my storage will be cut to 7GB as your article suggests