OneDrive Conundrum With Windows 10
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I did try this at home last night on Windows 10... damn if I couldn't find a way to find my Excel file that is on OneDrive through Windows Explorer or Excel open file options - OK yeah - this is a pretty big fail. I didn't realize it was this bad.
Now I want to try Google Drive and see how that behaves.
I'm thinking that the mobile version of the apps (mobile Word, mobile Excel) will work differently and probably be able to read directly from MS's servers of OneDrive.
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@garak0410, you mention that you have 10.3TB of data in OneDrive, do you have consumer OneDrive or an O365 account? if O365, do you have a consumer version of that, or do you have a Business acounnt of O365?
What I don't know is, if the consumer version of O365 uses OneDrive or ODfB?
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I took out an O365 business account 12 months ago, mainly as a secondary backup of my photos as I don't entirely trust Flickr. It was about $60. It's due for renewal in a couple of weeks and I've just realised I've never actually got round to using it! I'm not sure whether to renew or to switch to Google Drive which is $24 per 100GB so would probably work out about a similar price for me.
From my limited use of either product, I have to say I prefer Google.
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@Dashrender said:
I did try this at home last night on Windows 10... damn if I couldn't find a way to find my Excel file that is on OneDrive through Windows Explorer or Excel open file options - OK yeah - this is a pretty big fail. I didn't realize it was this bad.
Now I want to try Google Drive and see how that behaves.
I'm thinking that the mobile version of the apps (mobile Word, mobile Excel) will work differently and probably be able to read directly from MS's servers of OneDrive.
Yes...this is bad in Windows 10. You would think OneDrive access in Office 365/2013 would mean direct access to OneDrive...but now, it wants the locally synced folder to access any Office Document on OneDrive.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I took out an O365 business account 12 months ago, mainly as a secondary backup of my photos as I don't entirely trust Flickr. It was about $60. It's due for renewal in a couple of weeks and I've just realised I've never actually got round to using it! I'm not sure whether to renew or to switch to Google Drive which is $24 per 100GB so would probably work out about a similar price for me.
From my limited use of either product, I have to say I prefer Google.
I am preferring Amazon Cloud Drive for home use to either of them these days. No need to sync to your desktop.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I took out an O365 business account 12 months ago, mainly as a secondary backup of my photos as I don't entirely trust Flickr. It was about $60. It's due for renewal in a couple of weeks and I've just realised I've never actually got round to using it! I'm not sure whether to renew or to switch to Google Drive which is $24 per 100GB so would probably work out about a similar price for me.
From my limited use of either product, I have to say I prefer Google.
If all you need is raw storage
I guess this is the same price as google... Move along
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@Dashrender said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
I took out an O365 business account 12 months ago, mainly as a secondary backup of my photos as I don't entirely trust Flickr. It was about $60. It's due for renewal in a couple of weeks and I've just realised I've never actually got round to using it! I'm not sure whether to renew or to switch to Google Drive which is $24 per 100GB so would probably work out about a similar price for me.
From my limited use of either product, I have to say I prefer Google.
If all you need is raw storage
I guess this is the same price as google... Move along
Those prices are really, really high compared to Amazon for anything approaching a TB.
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My O365 account is around $60 for unlimited storage which is much cheaper than Amazon or Google. That's ODfB rather than OD.
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The Amazon Cloud Drive that Scott mentioned is also $60 a year... I would seriously consider these services if I wasn't already paying about that for Crashplan.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
My O365 account is around $60 for unlimited storage which is much cheaper than Amazon or Google. That's ODfB rather than OD.
My Amazon is actually unlimited, not limited to 4TB or less as ODfB is limited to, and only $60. Maybe you got one of the magic ODfB accounts, but they can't be guaranteed. I have one and there are huge limits on it. I can't get one even close to 1TB.
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@dafyre said:
The Amazon Cloud Drive that Scott mentioned is also $60 a year...
Really? It's an eye-watering $500 here:
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@Carnival-Boy said:
My O365 account is around $60 for unlimited storage which is much cheaper than Amazon or Google. That's ODfB rather than OD.
And comes with all of the other O365 goodness.... the reality though, unless MS has fixed it, you can't store more than, was it 10 or 20 thousand files in it?
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@Dashrender said:
the reality though, unless MS has fixed it, you can't store more than, was it 10 or 20 thousand files in it?
That will be gone by the end of the year according to this http://blog.programframework.com/office365/holy-odfb-file-limits-none/
So I might renew after all.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@Dashrender said:
the reality though, unless MS has fixed it, you can't store more than, was it 10 or 20 thousand files in it?
That will be gone by the end of the year according to this http://blog.programframework.com/office365/holy-odfb-file-limits-none/
So I might renew after all.
I've lost faith in their "unlimited" claims. They've cried wolf on this way too much.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@dafyre said:
The Amazon Cloud Drive that Scott mentioned is also $60 a year...
Really? It's an eye-watering $500 here:
Owch... Amazon Cloud Drive site here https://www.amazon.com/clouddrive/home shows
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@dafyre said:
The Amazon Cloud Drive that Scott mentioned is also $60 a year...
Really? It's an eye-watering $500 here:
That's odd since I bought my Amazon Cloud Drive in Europe and it was the same as the US price.
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@dafyre said:
The Amazon Cloud Drive that Scott mentioned is also $60 a year... I would seriously consider these services if I wasn't already paying about that for Crashplan.
Crashplan and Amazon Cloud are two different types of services Crashplan is for backups and archives not for immediate access. Cloud storage would be for immediate access only.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Crashplan and Amazon Cloud are two different types of services Crashplan is for backups and archives not for immediate access. Cloud storage would be for immediate access only.
True, true. Sadly, some of us are just broke college employees, lol. I have plenty of local storage at home (3TB in 'server', another 3TB for local Crashplan, and also Crashplan in the cloud)... I'm covered. 8-)