(MoneyWatch)
COMMENTARY Online storage service SkyDrive has been around for a number
of years, but as a second-tier Windows Live product it has gotten little love
or promotion from Microsoft (MSFT). Consequently, the far more capable Dropbox
hosting service became the favorite among tech trendsetters and small business
alike. Until now: SkyDrive
has just leapfrogged most other Internet cloud services and
unreservedly deserves your attention.
First and
foremost, Microsoft has released desktop clients for both Windows and Mac OS,
which integrates SkyDrive's gigabytes of online storage into your operating
system. In Windows, open Windows Explorer and your SkyDrive files are a click
away. Save a file to your PC's SkyDrive folder and it's immediately
synchronized with the cloud. Just like Dropbox. You can install the desktop
apps from the SkyDrive home page.
And then
there's the enhanced SkyDrive app for iOS -- it elegantly and
seamlessly lets you access files from your phone or iPad. The only major
operating systems that SkyDrive doesn't yet support are Linux and Android --
serious oversights, to be sure, given the proliferation of but SkyDrive
is certainly feeling like a cross-platform solution.
Traditionally,
SkyDrive offered 25GB, which was quite a bit of storage space, but it came with
a lot of strings. No single file could be larger than 100MB, and if you hit the
25GB ceiling you were out of luck, since there was no upgrade policy. In this
regard, Microsoft both gives and takes away. New users, for example, are now
limited to just 7GB for free. But if you are an existing SkyDrive user, rush
over to your SkyDrive page and click to upgrade your account from 7GB back to
the full 25GB (before this offer expires).
On the plus
side, the file limitation is now a massive 2GB, so SkyDrive is useful for
sharing large files. And if you need more than your free allotment of space,
Microsoft now lets you add 20GB for $10 a year, or as much as 100GB for $50 a
year. Check out the upgrade page for all pricing details.
This is the
upgrade I've been waiting for. SkyDrive now fully integrates into the Windows
and Mac file systems, so you're no longer limited to uploading files through
Web forms. And few other cloud services can compete with SkyDrive on sheer
storage space. SkyDrive is now the service to beat.
By: Dave Johnson
© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.

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