Google Drive: A slick Dropbox killer?
The search giant throws its hat into the cloud storage-services ring, giving users 5 gigs of free space and providing an integrated experience with other Google apps
Google Drive is a virtual storage space where you can stash images, videos, and documents and access them on multiple devices. Photo: googleblog.blogspot.com/ SEE ALL 97 PHOTOS
Best Opinion: Gizmodo, Lifehacker, Slashgear
After years of rumors, Google Drive, the search company's long-awaited entry into the cloud storage wars, is finally here. With an interface that evokes Google Docs, Drive functions much like Dropbox, allowing users to drag-and-drop files they want to store in the cloud onto a desktop folder. Users get 5 GB of free space, and can add an additional 25 GB for $30 each year. Google, however, is late to the race — Dropbox already fulfills the file-storing needs of well over 50 million users, and consumers using competitors like Microsoft's SkyDrive, Apple's iCloud, Box, and SugarSync may also be hesitant to move their files. How does Google Drive stack up to its rivals?
Its integrating features make it worthwhile: "Google Drive hits a sweet spot between value and flexibility," says Adrian Covert at Gizmodo. Dropbox may be available on more mobile platforms (as yet, Google Drive lacks iPhone or iPad apps), but Drive is integrated with Google's other offerings: You can edit your documents via Google Docs, for instance. "It's not the cheapest or most comprehensive" of the available services, but the versatile Google Drive "appears to cover the widest swath of features people want."
"Google Drive, iCloud, Dropbox and more compared: What's the best cloud option?"
Dropbox is still the clear winner: "Drive is actually pretty solid for something that just launched," says Whitson Gordon at Lifehacker, but Google is also "super late to the game," which makes Drive's shortcomings — like the inability to restore files long after you've deleted them — a "little disappointing." Google Docs users will still love it. But Dropbox, with its superior desktop app, ability to control your syncing speed, and availability on a wider range of platforms, "still has the edge in most of our minds."
"File syncing faceoff: Dropbox vs. Google Drive"
Another free storage service? Why not?: Google Drive, Dropbox, SkyDrive, SugarSync, and more are "all certainly comparable to one another," says Chris Burns at Slashgear. Of course, Google hopes that Drive will "clobber the rest of the cloud storage services" to emerge as the one true victor. But there can only be one winner, right? "Wrong! You can feel free to use all these services if you wish, as none of them is able to detect that you're using" one of its competitors. "No high school jealousy among apps here, friends." Use them all for gigs and gigs of free storage.
"Google Drive vs. DropBox, SkyDrive, SugarSync, Box"
The 'awesome' self-piloted cars that allow the blind to drive
Google's self-driving car takes a man lacking 95 percent of his vision out for a spin. Is this the future of transportation?

The video: On a clear and sunny day in January, Steve Mahan stepped into the driver's seat of a Toyota Prius to run errands around town. Mahan is also 95 percent blind, far past the legal driving limit for impaired vision. But the car transported him through the... More
Will 'Google Play' topple iTunes?
The company is uniting its e-books, music, movie rentals, and Android apps under a new, easy-to-use storefront. Should Apple keep its eye on the rearview?

Kiss Google Music, Google Books, and the Android Market as you know them goodbye. Google is streamlining all of its digital media under a new destination called Google Play, which allows users to tap into 20,000 free songs (and choose from millions more to buy... More
Google's 'Do not track' button: Will it protect online privacy?
The search king says it's serious about insuring its users' privacy, but doubts persist

Not being evil is tougher than it looks. Following a spate of online privacy controversies, Google (which has long touted its "Don't be evil" mantra) and other web companies have agreed to install a "Do not track" feature in their browsers. The promise is... More
Google spies on iPhone users: Should the feds clamp down?
The search giant deployed a special code to bypass Apple's privacy settings — and track millions of users' surfing habits

Apple's Safari browser is designed to shield users from tracking by advertisers. This apparently didn't sit well with Google, which decided to give Safari's privacy settings the runaround, according to The Wall Street Journal. As a result, Safari users were tracked... More
Rupert Murdoch vs. Google: Does the search giant enable piracy?
The News Corp. tycoon accuses the internet search king of profiting from links to sites that steal movies and music

News Corp. media mogul Rupert Murdoch used his new Twitter account over the weekend to slam President Obama for "throwing his lot with Silicon Valley paymasters" who oppose the Stop Online Piracy Act, a bill that would force internet companies to block access to... More



































Follow Us: