Humyo offers 30GB of free online storage
Humyo is an online storage service that offers users up to 30GB of free storage. But here's the catch (if you can call it a catch), 25 of those gigs are reserved for media files. That means you only get 5GB for backing up other documents and files, which makes Humyo useful for saving and sharing media, but not quite as useful as an online backup solution.
Humyo does have some nice multimedia features. It will automatically arrange music by album, artist, genre, and year based on the file metadata. And there's a built in media player for playing media files.
For $5 per month, you can sign up for a premium account which gives you 100GB that you can use to store any type of file. Humyo also offers a desktop client for Windows that lets you add a virtual hard drive to your PC for drag and drop uploading. You can try the desktop client for two weeks for free, but if you want to continue using it after that you need to sign up for a premium account.
[via MakeUseOf]
Humyo does have some nice multimedia features. It will automatically arrange music by album, artist, genre, and year based on the file metadata. And there's a built in media player for playing media files.
For $5 per month, you can sign up for a premium account which gives you 100GB that you can use to store any type of file. Humyo also offers a desktop client for Windows that lets you add a virtual hard drive to your PC for drag and drop uploading. You can try the desktop client for two weeks for free, but if you want to continue using it after that you need to sign up for a premium account.
[via MakeUseOf]













Comments
7
Subscribe to commentsBlackCoffeeNoSugarJun 25th 2008 12:31PM
I can never trust companies like this. You never know when your data is going to disappear without even saying "Good bye" to you.
PeterJun 25th 2008 5:17PM
Yep, and their answer to that is "keep a copy of your files on your own drive." Gee thanks, I'll pass on this one.
http://www.humyo.com/pages/en/online-file-storage-questions#GoPop
jakeJun 25th 2008 1:39PM
or you could use amazon for $.15/gb
CaptainPlanetJun 25th 2008 2:15PM
What if I change the extension on my text documents to .mp3?
SparkJun 25th 2008 9:09PM
important to point out that on the free acount, data gets deleted if you don't log in every 90 days.
JoeyJul 1st 2008 7:27PM
Not to mention that the app on their site only works for 15 days as a trial
whiskeyJun 26th 2008 7:48AM
Are you worried about security of your files? Test it!
We are going to use nothing fancy here:
Download some music (say, The Slip from NIN is Creative Commons) and upload it to your account.
Now, using Firefox and it's nifty AdBlock Plus addon, list the blockable elements on the page while playing a song. Notice any mp3's on the list?
Right click the mp3 and select copy the element's address.
Go to http://www.jeroenwijering.com/?page=wizard&example=2 (the Jeroen Wijering wizard page) and select there from the options "Mediaplayer with single mp3", let it update.
Paste the file address to the file field and press "Update and preview the code".
Now, this is nothing you couldn't achieve by yourself using some webhosting, a couple of free or opensource scripts and some cleverness. And it's going to cheaper and have more space. Plus you don't get any logos you do not want (or you can brand it yourself if you are so inclined).
This is for media files, for documents... better use ThinkFree Office or Google Docs.