OneDrive Delivers Unlimited Cloud Storage To Office 365 Subscribers 145
First time accepted submitter FlyHelicopters writes "Dropbox, Google, Microsoft, and others have been competing to become your favorite place to store stuff in the cloud. Just this past June, Microsoft upgraded Office 365 users from 25GB to 1TB, now they are upping the ante with unlimited OneDrive storage. There remains a single file size limit of 10GB per file, it is not clear if that limit will be removed with this upgrade.
Re:Sky drive? (Score:4, Informative)
They got sued by the UK broadcaster BSkyB and lost so they had to change the name.
Re:Sky drive? (Score:5, Interesting)
my work has office 365 accounts and i'll be darned if I can get sky drive sync to work. it doesn't seem like its' a replacement for dropbox or sync.com.
BTW I highly recommend sync.com. It has the same feature set as dropbox, but it's a Canadian company and doesn't have condi on the board. I'm not naïve, I know that FBI/NSA will git you wherever you are, but seriously eff dropbox they can kma.
Re: (Score:2)
my work has office 365 accounts and i'll be darned if I can get sky drive sync to work.
This is exactly why my reaction to this story was "Giant who-cares". Instead of x GB of dysfunctional online storage that doesn't work more often than it does Microsoft is now giving me infinite amounts of brokenness to play with. It's like taking a faulty laptop back to Dell and as a special offer they replace it with three faulty laptops.
Re: (Score:2)
I have a "OneDrive for Business" folder on my desktop. Presumably if I put a file in this folder it will sync to be online, then I can access it online from any computer. But does it sync automatically or is it a manual thing? Dropbox syncs pretty much every 5 minutes or whenever there's a file update. Also on dropbox there are past versions available online. Is this true for OneDrive?
Re: (Score:1)
...because people were confusing a cloud-based data storage service with a satellite tv service....
Re: (Score:3)
It was SkyDrive, until they had to rename it due to a lawsuit from British broadcaster BSkyB
http://www.infoworld.com/artic... [infoworld.com]
Re: (Score:1)
What if LibreOffice were renamed to "OneOffice", wouldn't Microsoft lawyers have a party?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
"Dropbox, Google, Microsoft, and others have been competing to become your favorite gateway to the NSA."
FTFY
Who cares (Score:5, Insightful)
when most of your subscribers have an upstream bandwidth of 1mbps or less, does it matter whether their storage limit is 1 TB or 100000 TB?
Re:Who cares (Score:4, Insightful)
While that is a fair point... Those speeds will increase over time.
Just this month, Verizon FIOS upgraded our service with what they call "SpeedMatch":
http://campaign.verizon.com/fa... [verizon.com]
So if you have 35 megabits down, now you have 35 megabits up. 75 down, 75 up, etc...
Granted, not everyone has FIOS, or can get it, but it may well provide pressure to others (Comcast we're looking at you) to match it.
Re: (Score:3)
Where I live, yes, I get those speeds all the time.
We are fairly heavy users of the Internet. Between watching streaming shows on Amazon Instant Video, downloading games and apps on the PS3 and iPads, Steam games on the computer, Skype to video chat with family overseas, it works very well all the time.
I also use 6 different cloud services. For simple storage, iCloud, DropBox, Google Drive, and OneDrive. For backup, I use both Crashplan and Backblaze to backup all our computers in the house. I work from
Re: (Score:2)
You all must have a different OneDrive than I do...
Is it as fast as DropBox? Maybe, maybe not... It is fast enough...
It auto backups our pictures and videos from our phones, it downloads anything I need quickly, it fully synced 850GB of data soon enough that I don't actually recall how long it took, but it wasn't very long...
For "free" I don't expect rocket performance, just "good enough" performance, and it does that.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
So if you have 35 megabits down, now you have 35 megabits up. 75 down, 75 up, etc...
Granted, not everyone has FIOS, or can get it, but it may well provide pressure to others (Comcast we're looking at you) to match it.
Cable's limitations on upstream bandwidth are architectural and not caused by their normal asshole business practices.
Even the latest and greatest DOCSIS 3.0 hardware being rolled out to consumers is limited to bonding 4 upstream channels.
Cisco's literature says it's capable of 120 Mbits upload, but that seems a little optimistic, and I don't know where they pulled 30 Mbit/channel from.
In some markets, Comcast has pulled fiber to the home and offers 505/100 Mbit service, but the rest of their markets only h
Re: (Score:2)
the vast majority of home users don't require significant upload bandwidth
You're quite right, even with cloud storage...
The average home user may well take some videos and pictures on vacation or for a holiday, then end up with 50GB to upload... Once in awhile...
Even if it took 3 or 4 days to upload, so what? Few people generate that often enough to matter, even a 5 megabit upload would be fine for most people.
Re: (Score:2)
The majority of home users would benefit greatly from a secure, off-site backup system. I'm hoping that as broadband speeds increase they become more common.
Having said that, since bandwidth is infinite over time many people already have terabytes in their online backup accounts. I've got something like 80GB in mine, all fully encrypted of course.
Who cares (Score:2)
Dropbox et al have built a business model on selling what MS and Google are now abundantly giving away for free. I'm sure they care quite a bit and it will be interesting to see how they respond in an effort to stay relevant.
Re: (Score:2)
The Dropbox client actually works and reliably syncs documents across devices. As somebody who has been struggling to get OneDrive to work properly for the year that I've had a ton of free storage (from the Surface Pro 2 promotion last winter), that is much more than Microsoft can offer.
Re: (Score:2)
I was thinking of that when I was typing it up...
DropBox was our first "cloud" service, mostly because it came with our Galaxy III phones and included 50GB of "bonus" space with the phones. Boy, that was a lot at the time. :)
We still have that space and keep some files there, but we moved on to Google Drive last year and then this past summer, to OneDrive when the 1TB offer came out.
We were still on Office 2010 at the time and I was going to skip 2013, but for $100 a year, I get a complete copy of Office 2
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Speaking for myself, it's a market I care quite strongly about (having a Mac and being a fan of Dropbox). It's also a market that's used to paying for decent features.
iCloud doesn't work well on anything but my single Mac. Barely tried Google Drive or OneDrive, but their clients were just terrible each time I have. Dropbox works very well on the 3 workstation OSes and 2 phone OSes I use day-to-day.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
So Dropbox has a chance to tread water until MS fixes that.
Not really a bright future considering my point wasn't just about MS. Does the Google client work better? How much free space does Apple give?
If it supports rsync I'll care. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Anyone know of such a service that supports the rsync protocol (either over ssh or any other rsync-friendly transport). If so - bandwidth limitations don't suck so bad; since you'd be typically just streaming incremental changes.
Yea, Dropbox. Use the Linux client. I kinda feel like I am missing something here ..... There is also a third party Linux Google Drive client. That feels a little clunky to me but would probably do the trick.
Re: (Score:2)
Are you claiming that OneDrive isn't incremental? Or just assuming it isn't?
Re: (Score:2)
OneDrive isn't meant for "backup". Neither is Google Drive or DropBox for that matter...
Services like CrashPlan, Carbonite, and Backblaze are what backup is for...
The "drive" services are meant to be cloud storage of actual files that you actually use, which is why MS Office will save directly to OneDrive if you like. I personally save locally to my OneDrive folder and let the app upload and sync in the background.
That isn't "backup", that is nice handy storage without having to thumb drive it.
Re: (Score:2)
rsync.net is swell, but the price is crazy. For example, $140/month for 1 TB.
I had to re-read it several times to make sure I wasn't misreading it. For comparison, Dropbox is $9.99/month for 1 TB.
Granted, rsync.net has a very different feature set that is very flexible. However, I wish I could pay 1/10th the cost and manage the redundancy and number of snapshots and such myself (ie. a purpose built vm with a big data drive).
Re: (Score:1)
So it takes a few days to upload my music collection, it will only take a couple minutes to upload new albums individually, and I'll be able to access it all from anywhere.
Re: (Score:2)
So it takes a few days to upload my music collection, it will only take a couple minutes to upload new albums individually, and I'll be able to access it all from anywhere.
^ This...
I have to say, until you experience the joy of simply having all your files online for you any time, any where, on any device, you don't know what you're missing.
Re: (Score:2)
I used to hang out in a swedish photography/videography forum. Bandwidth is cheap in Sweden, so a lot of these guys were on 100+ Mbit connections and liked to keep a backup in the cloud. Whenever a new "unlimited" storage service came around they'd hop on and upload tens of terabytes of photos/videos. (None of wich could be de-duplicated, since it was all original work.)
Inevitably, the storage service would update its TOS within a year, or go bankrupt.
Re: (Score:2)
Most of those "unlimited" services weren't Microsoft, or Google, or other such very large companies that can afford a hundred million dollars for a proper back end system.
10TB of data used to be a lot. Today? Meh, single hard drives that size are about to come out, 10 USB flash drives can hold that these days.
A Terabyte isn't what it used to be... Just wait until consumers get 4K video cameras... :)
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, I think a lot of customers aren't consumers, but companies. And I've seen reasonably big ones move to O365 as well. These could conceivably make good use of the added space.
I don't think the average home or small business user would even fill up 1TB of space with all the documents they generate unless they distribute movies in PowerPoint or something.. On the p
Re: (Score:2)
^ The above post is why you should never, ever use the Internet while under the influence of... anything... :)
Wow (Score:3)
> now they are upping the ante with unlimited OneDrive storage.
Think of the Pr0n! You could put the entire country's Pr0n in the cloud!
But seriously, it'll be "unlimited" until disk space becomes an issue. Which is to say, it's unlimited until it isn't.
Re: (Score:3)
But seriously, it'll be "unlimited" until disk space becomes an issue. Which is to say, it's unlimited until it isn't.
Fair point... Of course, with 8TB and 10TB drives starting to ship and larger tape solutions coming online, it is quite possible that the storage they can hold will continue to grow as fast, if not faster, than the demand.
Will people upload tons right away? Sure... but I don't think it will keep up from the initial surge, after all, does the average user really produce that much original content?
Home movies are probably the single largest source of "original content" and honestly the past 6 years of HD h
Re: (Score:2)
You're right, it's actually a policy thing more than a cost thing. Using white box like google and I think Yahoo, the price of storage is dirt cheap. (Compensate for reliability with some decent raid/backup scheme) No reason why they couldn't take advantage of that.
But storage on the intranet remains miniscule and expensive. Try to get a partition big enough to build a reasonably sized virtual instance, and you'll get handed 20 Gbytes because "storage is expensive".
And so, potential customers continue
Re: (Score:2)
...
But storage on the intranet remains miniscule and expensive. Try to get a partition big enough to build a reasonably sized virtual instance, and you'll get handed 20 Gbytes because "storage is expensive".
And so, potential customers continue to do their stuff on their own PC, because really, storage isn't that expensive.
[bold by me]
Is that really what you mean? Do you mean that when you ask your local IT for space, you get jack squat? IMO, that's their own (bad) decisions. They can easily do the same sort of thing the others are doing to provide loads of space. There's lots of ways to do it, but here's a really simple one: use a bunch of white box servers; max out their onboard SATA with largest disks you can get; stick glusterfs on them all and enable sufficient redundancy. In most cases, they'll probably still go with t
Re: (Score:2)
> Is that really what you mean? Do you mean that when you ask your local IT for space, you get jack squat?
That would be hyperbole, but, essentially, yes. In a time when 4 terabyte drives can be had for less than $200, (wholesale, but any PC builder knows where to get them) trying to get larger than a 40 Gbyte share or virtual drive is like pulling teeth, and you pay a monthly price for the storage for which you could more than buy the storage outright every month. Now, mind you, a lot of this pays for
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
don't you think that Microsoft is not just doing a "store once, mark for all" system, where they note that the same large files are being backed up by 10,000 users. They store a single copy and just put a pointer to that copy for everyone.
No, their actual storage hardware probably uses block-level deduplication.
Re: (Score:2)
That would work too...
Re: (Score:2)
Anyone willing to test the limits?
Just upload 10 GB chunks of random data with a zip, rar, 7z, tar, whatever extensions.
Re: (Score:2)
Take daily full snapshots of your 3 TB system? You'd reach a petabyte in less than a year.
Re: (Score:3)
Take daily full snapshots of your 3 TB system? You'd reach a petabyte in less than a year.
Nope. If they are using any reasonable de-dup algorithm, they will only be storing the diffs.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
:) Normal people aren't uploading anything that requires encryption.
My family vacation pictures, my saved documents, etc... None of that is really worth caring about...
If I encrypt before uploading, it becomes a big fat pain in the butt to use and might as well not bother, just thumb drive it.
Re: Wow (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Yep, as it is, I'm using about 850GB of my OneDrive now. Do I have more to put there? Meh, maybe...
The important stuff is there, the full system backup is handled by proper backup services.
Re: (Score:2)
Except that most users' connection won't be able to upload even close to 3 TB in a day.
Correct, and even the fastest aren't going to do it.
On an OC3 (156 Mbps) 3TB would take over 46 hours (almost 4 days).
On an OC12 (622 Mbps), it's about 11.5 hours.
FiOS 50/50 plan is over 6 days.
I don't know what FiOS fastest is (maybe 150/150, since someone above mentioned it), but that's still 4 days.
How many people have a dedicated OC12 at home?
Re: (Score:1)
I think it'd be fair to ask who would have a dedicated OC12 ANYWHERE. And that'd assume Microsoft would be matching that speed and dedicated to just you. Even if you've got a wide open OC12 yourself, I don't think you'd be likely to see more than OC3 speeds to Microsoft. Probably far below that.
Re: (Score:2)
I have a FIOS 150/150 connection to my home...
The fastest? 500/500...
At that speed?
3TB would take 14 hours to upload, assuming Microsoft could take it that fast.
My monthly bandwidth use, measured by my router, for both up and downstream traffic? About 7TB per month.
Like I've said, I'm a heavy user... not normal at all, but people like me do exist.
None of that is illegal content, maintaining a VPN, running remote desktop, keeping streaming music on, have kids who watch everything via streaming video (we d
Re: (Score:2)
I vote we upload archive.org ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Give us the real details that matter, like Terms of Service.
Sorry, downloading a document that size will put you over your data cap.
It's an easy marketing stratagy (Score:3)
I'm using a tiny fraction of the 5Tb they already give me even though I put all my photo's, music, home video, documents, etc up there. So it's already basically unlimited.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
NSA Indexing (Score:5, Insightful)
What a gift to the NSA!
Re:NSA Indexing (Score:4, Insightful)
This.
Perfect Forward Security. (Score:2)
What t a gift to the NSA!
Or not.
Outlook.com and OneDrive have also been updated to use perfect forward security (PFS). In PFS, the keys used for each connection are randomly generated on a per-session basis. This is important because it protects against bulk data collection. Without PFS, if a law enforcement agency or hacker can demand or steal the long-term key used to secure connections, they can use that key to decrypt all historic, recorded sessions. PFS prevents this; compromising one session's key only enables decryption of that session.
This will secure Web access, the OneDrive mobile clients, and the OneDrive desktop clients.
Microsoft is also using certificates with 2048 bit keys on both the Outlook.com and OneDrive Web front-ends, another change planned last December.
Microsoft expands the use of encryption on Outlook, OneDrive [arstechnica.com] [July 1, 2014]
Re: (Score:2)
What a gift to the NSA!
Perhaps... But I'm not under the false allusion that the data being on my local hard drive is any safer from the NSA.
If the NSA wanted to read my local hard drive, they could do so I'm sure. Either there is a back door in Windows, or they could somehow get something installed on my computer to put a back door in...
Or, you know, since they are the government, when I'm not home, they could just break into my house and physically copy the hard drive. :) I'm sure they could do that without my noticing.
Thankf
Re: (Score:1)
Same could be said of most of the Japanese-Americans whom the federal government put in concentration camps during WWII.
Innocence and harmlessness are no protection when governments go bad.
Re: (Score:2)
While you are correct, none of the nerd ideas are going to help should that come to pass.
Encrypting our OneDrives is not going to make a difference if my government decides to lock me up because I'm white (or black or any other color).
It is focused on the wrong problem. Hiding from the NSA isn't likely to work. Not having a NSA or a government that does such things requires solutions and actions FAR beyond cloud storage.
What was done to the Japanese was wrong. Then again so was slavery. What has been do
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
All useful data reveals something about the user. Even benign stuff can reveal a user's personality or tastes or desires depending on the content. That information can be later used in marketing, or in the worst case scenario, used against the person in a legal attack (or worse).
Perhaps, but my family pictures of our recent vacation to Disney World wouldn't reveal much.
You know what they WOULD reveal? That we stood in front of the same 25 places that 10,000 other families did and took the same 200 pictures that everyone else did because we all went to a mass market consumer entertainment park meant to part us with our dollars in return for fantasy and fun for the whole family.
Nothing in our family pictures would tell you anything more than that just did.
Or have you never heard of
Re: (Score:2)
1TB ought to be enough for anybody
Ha! Someone had to say it...
Re: (Score:2)
1TB ought to be enough for anybody
Ha! Someone had to say it...
No, no they didn't.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I can tell you for 100% certainty that I can upload 10GB files.
If other people cannot, I have no idea why, perhaps open a support ticket?
But I do know the limit is 10GB now. I do hope that limit gets raised, I have 5 files in my OneDrive folder right now that are over 10GB in size, otherwise everything uploaded just fine.
Re: (Score:2)
In fairness, I would imagine they reserve the right to throttle heavy users...
That being said... What would you upload? Do you really have 250TB of files to upload? If you just copy and rename the files, don't you think they have a data deduplication system to compensate for that?
Re: (Score:2)
It seems you're unfamiliar with the performance of 365 cloud storage.
Short answer: your connection will not be the bottleneck.
It's even more fun trying to migrate terabytes of data back out of the MS cloud.
All cloud services story needs this in the headlin (Score:4, Insightful)
OneDrive Delivers Unlimited Cloud Storage To Office 365 Subscribers...for now.
Clouds evaporate, people.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
...so I am forced to remove my data
I don't understand this... you didn't have local copies of everything?
While I have lots stored in the cloud, every single bit of it is local as well.
We are a long way off from where I'd ever consider storing stuff ONLY in the cloud.
Re: (Score:1)
I'm just hoping that he got his money back if they offered him a years of unlimited, but only gave him three months of it.
Re: (Score:2)
While you might be right, his words were:
"Luckily I had most of it already local otherwise it would take a long time to download all of my data from the cloud."
He said "most of it"... that is why I replied with my surprise and question...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
If all stories came with that disclaimer then all stories would be burdened with a load of FUD.
Computers become outdated and useless, hard drives crash, thumbdrives are lost, LTOs break, RAIDs die, etc etc. Everything is temporary, no single solution is reliable and should be solely relied on. The cloud is no better or worse.
On the other hand TODAY while the cloud is still here OneDrive gives me a really nice service to consolidate my data across multiple machines. So why would I toss a great service to
Similar to cell "unlimited mobile data"? (Score:1)
It seems when it comes to mobile data, "unlimited" always means unlimited up to a point, when the service gets throttled unless you pay more. So "unlimited within the envelope of activity that we decide to allow". Even having no information about this particular offer, I would guess there is either a "reasonable use" clause hidden somewhere in terms of service, or somehow being able to throttle the service, e.g. by limiting upload bandwidth.
"Unlimited" seems to be one of those words that are used mainly for
Re: (Score:2)
"unlimited" always means unlimited up to a point
Well of course... I'm sure they have some terms and conditions that provide them some limits, and they always have the ultimate protection. If you're really a pain, they can offer you a refund and cancel your service. But that is always an option for any service provider, isn't it?
I'm sure they have thought about that, a few people may well upload 5TB, or 10TB... But someone, somewhere, just to be a pain, will try uploading 500TB... They'll probably cut that user off at some point, or throttle them...
L
Re: (Score:1)
You may have unlimited parking in a garage, but that garage still has a speed limit, probably a couple stop sighs, and a speed bump or two.
So MS biz model = Olive Garden? (Score:5, Funny)
MS demands address book and pics access? (Score:2)
Backups (Score:2)
They can offer as much as they want (Score:2)
Without privacy and/or enforcement of constitutional rights, the storage is worthless. As far as business goes, what happens if data or connectivity is lost during business hours? The potential for information being stolen by governments and private entities is just too great to use such storage services for anything important. Those public SANs are massive 'hack me please' and no-such-letter targets.
If employees need 'unlimited' much storage to do their jobs, then a local san is the most economical optio
Re: (Score:2)
There's stuff I really don't care if the NSA or FBI reads. If I want to keep something secret from them, I should do my own encryption. (Actually, I should encrypt a few files and put them in my Dropbox folder, just to keep things confused.)
Can you imagine working with a 10 GB Word file? (Score:3)
At a file size of 100 Mb, Word is barely usable (especially if you have Autosave on [1]). I still have nightmares about a job a couple years ago that involved such files.
1: and the larger the file, the more likely you'll need it at some point.
How can you montetize this? (Score:1)
Tailing behind Google (Score:1)
20000 File Limit (Score:1)
It was my understanding that OneDrive had an arbitrary limit of 20,000 files. I wonder if this limit has been removed as well. Many organizations couldn't come close to hitting their storage quotas due to this limitation.
http://community.office365.com/en-us/f/154/t/226245.aspx
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
OneDrive for Business uses SharePoint as the storage backend. It's a puzzling choice, and seems to be responsible for most of its limitations and brokenness.
There is NO unlimited (Score:1)