

With a few tighter security controls, better online file management and a simple cloud drive feature, it would be a winner. It hasn't been very difficult to work around its design flaws. If you keep backing up and deleting, you end up with a cloud folder so big that it exceeds the size of the source drive. You can only restore files and they restore back in the same folder in the same directory. You have to back things up and delete them, you can't just move files to the cloud like you can with pCloud. It doesn't work very flexibly as a stand-alone cloud drive. Icloud is designed for backup so all its features want to mirror what's on your server / workstation. Having said that, once my 10TB is used up, the website doesn't offer a way to expand, which sucks as I have more than 30TB I'd like to put in the cloud but nobody seems to want my money. I was lured in to iCloud by the price and the size of the cloud storage allocation, which seems to be a very inflexible feature of cloud storage in general. I don't have time to wade through their incomprehensible marketing and no need for their features, just a little black box in the cloud that I can afford and grows with my needs.

I'm just a small photo business with around 30TB of assets and yet the likes of Google and Amazon treat me like I'm Nasa and want to sell me enterprise-level solutions.


It supports storing data in the cloud, off-site disaster recovery, an active and accessible data archive, and long term storage. IDrive® e2 is an S3 compatible, scalable cloud-object storage platform with no ingress/egress fees, as well as being one of the few solutions available that does not charge an extra fee for downloading data.
