Cloud computing and related services have seen considerable expansion during 2019. For 2019, Platform as a Service options are likely to dominate, according to expert Krishnan Ramanujam. He offers his 2019 outlook.
Cloud storage provider Box has announced it has partnered with Google to bring the search giant's computer vision tech to its platform. The decision to link Box to Google's cloud will let users search through photos even if they're not explicitly tagged.
Google has announced it is doubling the maximum size of Gmail attachments, letting you send larger files. However, it uses Google Drive as an intermediary. The new cap is larger than that offered by Gmail's primary rivals, Outlook and Yahoo.
Dropbox has announced a new feature that lets you access all your cloud files from your desktop, even if they're not synced to your computer. Smart Sync is similar to Microsoft's abandoned OneDrive placeholders, making cloud storage easier to use.
It has been revealed that a hack of cloud storage provider Dropbox reported in 2012 actually affected nearly 70 million users. The hackers responsible for the theft have now dumped the data onto the Internet, revealing the true scale of the attack.
Siacoin, Nebulous Labs's upcoming cryptocurrency-based data storage platform aims at beating the current industry giants such as Dropbox and Amazon S3 with its innovative technology.
Popular cloud storage provider Dropbox has announced it will discontinue support for Microsoft's aging Windows XP this summer. Users will not be able to login to their accounts to access their files and will be automatically signed out in a few months.
If your small business relies strictly on hardware and physical servers to store your critical data, you're one small incident away from business disaster.
Toronto -
Everyone has heard of cloud computing, but for the first time ever, an event promoter in Mississauga, Ont. has created cloud competing. Cloud Warriors is a cool new trivia game played by using smartphones to tweet answers to a Twitter Wall.
A newly released document from the Department of Defense reveals that the government agency has come up with two inventive ways to store classified government information online using cloud computing.
Have you been searching, eyes cast up at the heavens, wondering where all of these files you supposedly saved to the “cloud” might be? If this is you, you are not alone, but you may already know more about the “cloud” than you think.
New York -
It seems even Wall Street is heading to the Cloud. No longer are individuals, small businesses and organizations using cloud storage, but various Wall Street firms are adopting cloud computing practices as well.