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Don wrote:I like that you can use it for all music, not just Amazon purchased tunes. There is trouble brewing though as they didn't get licensing from all the big record labels so there may be some type of copyright battle looming ahead.
I do like that I don't have to bring my portable hard drive with me anymore when I come to work.
Don wrote:maverick218 wrote:Pretty cool concept, but with the music that I have stored, it's going to take 27 hours to upload it all- that's crazy.
If you have ever uploaded video torrents, then you'll see that 27 hours is nothing.
S2M wrote:Don wrote:maverick218 wrote:Pretty cool concept, but with the music that I have stored, it's going to take 27 hours to upload it all- that's crazy.
If you have ever uploaded video torrents, then you'll see that 27 hours is nothing.
I don't know where you go for your torrents, but I've never had to wait more than 3hrs for a torrent....
Rip Rokken wrote:There was another recent thread asking about people's experience with Amazon -- I think we all rated it extremely high on the satisfaction list.
Just saw this today, lol... sounds like there are a few upset customers at least!
http://www.crn.com/news/cloud/229402233 ... arency.htm
Some excerpts...
"The Amazon cloud outage that rocked the industry and called into question the reliability of cloud computing has reinforced the need for cloud computing providers to be open and up front with their clients, while also reaffirming that cloud computing support options need to be revisited."
"Amazon has been extremely quiet around how the failure occurred and how it will be avoided in the future," said Joseph Coyle, CTO for North America for global solution provider Capgemini. "We need to remember that this was not a system wide outage so although it is a major hit to Amazon, I believe that if they explain the issue and how to avoid it they can hold back the damage."
"They really need to communicate during the outage," Burns said. "There have been a lot of complaints about Amazon's lack of communication during this outage. But cloud providers also have a lot of responsibility to ensure their infrastructure is available. Amazon customers expect individual servers to go down more often than in their own datacenters. But they sure didn't expect a widespread, multi-day outage. They understand that is a possibility now and can take some steps."
The Cloud has its benefits for sure, but it is definitely not the be-all and end-all for everyone, especially businesses who can't afford downtime or data loss. For businesses especially, there are tons of factors and risks that they never tell you about on the sales end, and I see articles like the one above weekly. Intuit is another great example -- a while back, their online service went out for a few days, and many companies couldn't access payroll to print checks for their employees. DOH!!!
Don wrote:S2M wrote:Don wrote:maverick218 wrote:Pretty cool concept, but with the music that I have stored, it's going to take 27 hours to upload it all- that's crazy.
If you have ever uploaded video torrents, then you'll see that 27 hours is nothing.
I don't know where you go for your torrents, but I've never had to wait more than 3hrs for a torrent....
I'm talking about uploading, not downloading.
Don wrote:I like that you can use it for all music, not just Amazon purchased tunes. There is trouble brewing though as they didn't get licensing from all the big record labels so there may be some type of copyright battle looming ahead.
I do like that I don't have to bring my portable hard drive with me anymore when I come to work.
Arkansas wrote:Don wrote:I like that you can use it for all music, not just Amazon purchased tunes. There is trouble brewing though as they didn't get licensing from all the big record labels so there may be some type of copyright battle looming ahead.
I do like that I don't have to bring my portable hard drive with me anymore when I come to work.
Of course. Big Brother wants to know everything in your playlist.
later~
Saint John wrote:Fuck Amazon. Here's where it's at:
Apple's Next Revolution, Will They Change Cloud Computing Forever?
It is my belief that Apple is going to unveil a cloud music system that is similar to the one Amazon has, but with a huge difference. The concept is that instead of having a mp3 player with a huge physical harddrive to hold all your music and files, you have an mp3 player that has a slim harddrive that accesses all of the music stored in the cloud. Basically, cloud computing for music.
So here’s the difference. Amazon’s model allows you to upload your own music files to the cloud and then download them to each of your devices, where as Apple’s model already will have all the files licensed and stored (like the iTunes store) where, upon purchase, the music track is then simply “shared” with that user and their devices, instead of having to be moved or downloaded to a separate drive each time. This is more brilliant than you might think: instead of having one file that has to be copied into more files, thus taking up more server space, that one file is merely accessed by more devices. Much more efficient.
If it ended there, I’d be happy, but here’s why I’m really excited. Like the iPod, music was a “market-in” to draw people to buying iMacs and iBooks, and this cloud music locker is Apple’s “market-in” to extend their mobile me service into true cloud computing.
Almost all the pieces are already in place. Apple has a system for uploading and storing your files to the cloud (iDisk), Apple has a system for storing and transferring full applications to and from the cloud (the App Store), and Apple has the proven server competence to run it all (eg. iTunes).
This is why Apple has been buying and building billions of dollars worth of servers.
So say for example, you want to write a report for work. You open the App that you use (Pages recommended), which, because it is cloud based, you can open it on you Mac or iPad, and then you write your post, which will then be saved to your folder in the cloud to be accessed by any of your devices. That is true cloud computing, and Apple will be the first company to connect the hardware/software dots in a way that will make sense to the average consumer.
So when does this all begin? I suspect Apple to announce the cloud based music locker service sometime in or before the fall, when Apple traditionally announces iPod/iTunes upgrades.
After that, its to the moon.
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