Apparently the government wants to claim that if you store your data in the cloud, you've given up your rights to it.
I never saw the point of the Cloud bit; I want my data WITH me, not dependent on being wirelessly connected to some distant server.
I never saw the point of the Cloud bit; I want my data WITH me, not dependent on being wirelessly connected to some distant server.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-03 06:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-03 06:58 pm (UTC)I set up several google calendars for our family so that my husband and I can see each other's days off, mostly so that I can see his days off (he works a ten-line schedule rotating around the week.) After some setup, this information is available on my google calendar, my Android phone, and his Android phone. (Theoretically his google calendar too but I don't know if he's ever used it.) I can make a change on my vacation schedule or the family events calendar and it just automatically appears on his schedule even if I forget to mention it to him.
There are disadvantages too, but you were puzzling about the point of the Cloud.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-03 07:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-03 07:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-03 11:08 pm (UTC)And I don't need to have wireless to use them - I only need wireless for the files to be automatically copied over, and there's a _lot_ of wireless out there, easily enough for me to get 5 minutes of data downloaded.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-04 07:56 pm (UTC)Cloud computing: client-server computing where you give to a total stranger your checkbook and credit cards, the keys to your house and, if you're really gung-ho about it, custody of your children.
None of us need cloud storage. A Mac mini or a netbook -- small, quiet, low-power -- with an always-on broadband connection and an SSH server can do everything your Apple or Amazon or whatever shiny thing does. It may not be as slick as Apple's shiny but it works, it's reliable (as reliable as your ISP and power company, anyway), and most importantly you control your data. You're not putting it into someone else's hands.
My ebooks and music and mail and stuff are on a little server at home. I know where they are, I can get at them almost any time I please, and I'm not held hostage by whatever storage provider the government decides to shut down next week.