Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 28th Jan 2013 22:38 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 550657
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13 years ago I was dead against the emerging trend of running thin clients and storing our data in the cloud. Now that it's here, I'm still dead against it.
"The cloud" is fine once it's yours: owncloud, SoGo, roundcube, ...
It helps you getting your data from everywhere, and to everyone _you_ want to give it.
The missing link is something like the Freedom Box (just without the zeal) that provides a plug&play experience of obtaining some space of your own on the net.
RE[2]: Comment by Laurence
by Laurence on Tue 29th Jan 2013 09:27
in reply to "RE: Comment by Laurence"
"The cloud" is fine once it's yours: owncloud, SoGo, roundcube, ...
It helps you getting your data from everywhere, and to everyone _you_ want to give it.
It helps you getting your data from everywhere, and to everyone _you_ want to give it.
True. I do run some services myself (eg Subsonic, my own hosting photo gallery, etc).
Even then though, I still dislike OSs that push processing away from native binary clients. eg webmail is great - possibly the best example of the 'cloud' in fact - but I still want a binary client that I can run locally. If just in case of emergencies (loss of internet, backing up stuff from the cloud, etc)
Edited 2013-01-29 09:32 UTC





Member since:
2007-03-26
13 years ago I was dead against the emerging trend of running thin clients and storing our data in the cloud. Now that it's here, I'm still dead against it.
It's great that Windows is finally under real competition, but this feels like a hollow victory.
Edited 2013-01-29 01:25 UTC