
Also the preferences are a bit more complete than Microsoft ones:įor example you can synch only some of the folders under the main GDrive folder and, well, you can buy more storage (the message is not so subtle.). There are the two core menu items (view local drive, open in browser) plus a few more direct links 8buy more storage, view items shared with me) and some nice status information (active account, available space).
SUGARSYNC DROPBOX SKYDRIVE INSTALL
Again, when you install GDrive you point it to a folder and it show a nice icon in your notification area, with some more menu items: Now you get integration with the Windows file system. it is integrated with Google Docs (and Google Apps), which already provided file storage at least for those (like myself) with a paid company account. Google's storage service has been rumored for years, and it was finally released recently.


This is much better than in the past, when there was only the web interface, but not a huge effort. And you can share them with other computers. You move files there, they get backed up online. That's all as there is no special menu, folder configuration or any other setting. The configuration settings are also a bit bare bone: there are two check boxes!Īs you look into the selected folder, or one of the subfolders, you see your files with a modified icon, loosely cloning TortoiseSVN, with the file status. You can open the local folder or open the online view in the browser. After the process, you get an icon in the notification area: Choose wisely, as you cannot change the folder later on but need to uninstall and re-install. Don't tell me Microsoft doesn't need competition to put its act together! Anyway, after you install it and connect it to your Microsoft account (or Windows Live ID) you get to pick a folder that's kept in synch with cloud storage. After a few years they released a client application in the same week Google released theirs. until the change the service name (I notice that changes Windows Live and Azure to something else). Microsoft has had SkyDrive for quite some time and now gave us early users some extra free space. DropBox? They had one for quite some time.

That's why Google released a Windows application for GDrive and Microsoft (after a few years) released one for SkyDrive.
SUGARSYNC DROPBOX SKYDRIVE PC
If you want to use them to keep a local copy of your main PC files on a safe location, and move others to a public folder to share them with the world, you don't want to use the browser and upload or download file. What I'm not seen covered is the cabability of the Windows client applications and the quality of their integration with Windows Explorer.
SUGARSYNC DROPBOX SKYDRIVE LICENSE
I've read countless blog posts about the license agreements and I really think that despite the different wording they are almost identical I've read debates about the price comparison (but they are difficult to compare, because they do different things). Over the last two weeks I've been playing a bit with the three main cloud storage services and their respective Windows applications, that let you map a folder to remote storage.
