
Kunal Khullar is a contributing writer at Tom\u2019s Hardware.\u00a0 He is a long time technology journalist and reviewer specializing in PC components and peripherals, and welcomes any and every question around building a PC. ","collapsible":{"enabled":true,"maxHeight":250,"readMoreText":"Read more","readLessText":"Read less"}}), "https://slice.vanilla.futurecdn.net/13-4-23/js/authorBio.js"); } else { console.error('%c FTE ','background: #9306F9; color: #ffffff','no lazy slice hydration function available'); } Kunal Khullar Social Links Navigation News Contributor Kunal Khullar is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. He is a long time technology journalist and reviewer specializing in PC components and peripherals, and welcomes any and every question around building a PC.
bolweval Same thing MS did a few years ago, just like a drug dealer, first you give it to them and then you start charging them after they're hooked/invested in your product! Reply
USAFRet bolweval said: Same thing MS did a few years ago, just like a drug dealer, first you give it to them and then you start charging them after they're hooked/invested in your product! Or, after actual usage investigation, they discovered that most people weren't using anything near that 15GB. Why provision that space if people will never ever use it? Reply
nctnl USAFRet said: Or, after actual usage investigation, they discovered that most people weren't using anything near that 15GB. Why provision that space if people will never ever use it? They scale resources ad-hoc, it's not provisioned up front. I agree with bolweval. It's a business after all. Reply
DiegoSynth USAFRet said: Or, after actual usage investigation, they discovered that most people weren't using anything near that 15GB. Why provision that space if people will never ever use it? No, both Google and Microsoft initially provided certain amount of storage, which later on was reduced and shared across the different applications (mail, drive, calendar, etc.) For someone who opened these accounts about 20 years ago, nowadays it's not only insufficient, but they already start screaming as soon as you are over a 70% of occupied space. They just want to force u to buy more. Reply
USAFRet "restricts new users to an initial 5GB" So far, it does not restrict or reduce existing accounts. I take a LOT of photos. 15GB would barely cover Jan-Feb this year. None stored in the google or MS cloud. But, a business is allowed to change their policies. A user can agree and continue, or go elsewhere. One of the many reasons I don't use cloud storage for backups. Reply
Kindaian Don't forget that the constant 20 emails per day you get stating that your storage is going to be deleted and you need to act now! Reply
DiegoSynth USAFRet said: "restricts new users to an initial 5GB" So far, it does not restrict or reduce existing accounts. I take a LOT of photos. 15GB would barely cover Jan-Feb this year. None stored in the google or MS cloud. But, a business is allowed to change their policies. A user can agree and continue, or go elsewhere. One of the many reasons I don't use cloud storage for backups. Yes, I totally agree. Unfortunately they also take space from automatic phone backups and other things which may not seem obvious to every user. But not completely relying on these services is probably the best approach, as "easy comes, easy goes". Reply
Stomx Google which did not invent anything but all was copicatted from others and just further improved over natural process of usage, slowly transforming into evil. Free 15GB was set a quarter century ago. Today these 15GB as well as internet traffic cost 100x less to maintain. Reply
davidjkay I don't think its security Stomx said: Google which did not invent anything but all was copicatted from others and just further improved over natural process of usage, slowly transforming into evil. Free 15GB was set a quarter century ago. Today these 15GB as well as internet traffic cost 100x less to maintain. Long ago it was losing money to grab market share like ai race today. Not it is ever increasing number of bots that might set up fake "human" accounts, freeload on google to get free online storage space and not be worth anything as far as advertising revenue Reply
davidjkay davidjkay said: I don't think its security Long ago it was losing money to grab market share like ai race today. Not it is ever increasing number of bots that might set up fake "human" accounts, freeload on google to get free online storage space and not be worth anything as far as advertising revenue And everyone is looking to cut costs on legacy stuff to reduce bleeding trying to become the dominant company in ai, like Amazon won to your door shipping and google won search Reply
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/software/cloud-storage/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/software/cloud-storage/google-floats-reduced-initial-5gb-free-cloud-storage-limit-users-claim-15gb-to-require-extra-security-measures-company-confirms-it-is-testing-a-new-storage-policy-for-new-accounts#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com/subscription
- The Core Ultra 7 270K was too good, so Intel scrapped the flagship Core Ultra 9 290K Plus — benchmarks of the 290K prototype find slim 2% faster performance in
- Trump says China is blocking Nvidia H200 purchases despite US approval — says country 'chose not to' sanction purchases, pushing homegrown chips instead
- Microsoft BitLocker-protected drives can now be opened with just some files on a USB stick — YellowKey zero-day exploit demonstrates an apparent backdoor
- Fully-functional RTX 3070 16GB gets frankensteined into existence by harvesting dead PCBs and RX 6800 XT's VRAM chips — doubles frame rate in games like Spider
- M5 Max MacBook Pro paired with RTX 5090 in an eGPU dock — runs Cyberpunk 2077 at over 100 FPS at max settings with frame generation
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.