The limits of cloud-based services

My Internet connection has been anything but “Comcastic” the last few days. I’ve been treated to frequent outages, slowness and, in general, a horrible experience. (Maybe Comcastic means craptastic?) Yesterday was even worse when my power went out for three hours while I was trying to work.

Both of these issues point to two inherent limitations with cloud-based services (software and storage that reside on the Internet, not on your hard drive). I use Gmail for e-mail, Google Docs for writing documents, DropBox for backing up my files, etc.

Well, when your Internet is not working and your power is out, cloud-based services don’t work. I was unable to write anything yesterday because I couldn’t access Google Docs. (While I could write in offline mode, I needed the Internet to get to my notes and files that I needed for my work. I also have a nasty habit of keeping some notes in my e-mail.) And while I could check my e-mail on my iPhone, I was unable to do any heavy duty e-mail writing, especially e-mails that contained attachments.

Don’t get me wrong, I love cloud storage and cloud applications. It allows me to work from any computer with a modern Web browser and an Internet connection. If one of my computers breaks, I can simply switch to another and continue working. My fortunes aren’t tied to a single machine.

But when the Internet is wonky or the power is out, local storage starts to look really good. I’ll have to work on a better solution that allows me to work better when I’m not online.

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  • http://www.lectroid.net Marc Matteo

    Hard drives crash. Tape recorders break. Typewriters jam and dang nabbit pencil lead snaps off just when you need it.

    The moral? Pretty much that there are days you just need to go down to the park with a Frisbee.

  • http://randompiercings.com/blog Pierce Presley

    Of course, the nice thing to have would be synced copies of cloud-based files on devices that could handle the storage limits (even better would be the ability to sync a subset of one’s files to a device, so you could have some of your stuff on, say, a netbook that doesn’t have space for all gazillion gigabytes of your stuff) so you could get to things when the Internet’s out or you’re away from civilization. I’ve about got this handled for my backup needs–I have online storage at Mozy and an external hard drive at home–but I have yet to see something that would keep my Gmail, Gdocs and Gcal synced with my computers with all the bells and whistles I’ve become accustomed to.

  • http://poynter.org Steve Myers

    How about using MobileMe’s iDisk? I realize that’s not free, but it allows syncing of important files. As for e-mail, perhaps you use an e-mail client with Gmail, which means you have copies of everything on your computer. You should be able to switch between Gmail on a browser and an e-mail program.

  • http://paulbalcerak.com Paul Balcerak
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