![]() The home screen is a “cloud explorer” that shows the cloud accounts you have connected, how much data you have stored in each and how much space you have remaining.īefore you can see all of that, of course, you’ll need to connect your cloud storage accounts to MultCloud. The interface doesn’t look like much, but it doesn’t need to. MultCloud operates through a browser-based UI that you can log into once you create an account. That’s really all there is for feature highlights. For example, there’s no way to attach expiry dates to file sharing links, and you can’t preview Microsoft Office or Google Docs files.Īside from feature misses, along with no desktop and mobile apps, the big one for most users will probably be the lack of two-factor authentication and private encryption, which we’ll discuss more when we talk security later. ![]() MultCloud lets you share and preview files stored in any connected cloud drive, too, but both features are pretty limited. Additionally, paying users can establish one-way syncs to multiple cloud destinations. For subscribers, up to 10 such processes can run at once. MultCloud can perform multiple file copies simultaneously. One-way syncs used for backup can also be set to run incrementally. Whether you’ve set up a one-way or two-way sync relationship, you can let that process run continuously or put it on a schedule to conserve bandwidth (if you’re a subscriber), which is useful for running large migrations overnight. Somewhat surprisingly, MultCloud doesn’t have apps for Android or iOS either. There’s no desktop client available, but cloud-to-cloud processes you’ve set up still take place whether you’re logged in or not. The process is managed entirely via a web interface. See below to find out what cloud storage services can be integrated. MultCloud specializes in cloud-to-cloud file transfers, allowing you to perform one time file migrations or create automated backup and sync relationships between services. Over the course of this MultCloud review, we’ll talk about what some of those services are, look at MultCloud’s full feature set, talk pricing and walk you through the user experience. Still, for those looking to create set-and-forget relationships between their cloud services, MultCloud gets the job done and supports many of the best cloud storage services, too. While you can share files with MultCloud, it isn’t a terrific productivity tool, either. Unlike Otixo (read our Otixo review) MultCloud doesn’t have any desktop or mobile apps it’s entirely web-based. Great for cloud-to-cloud transfer, cloud-to-cloud backup and cloud-to-cloud sync, MultCloud is otherwise a pretty limited tool when it comes to juggling multiple cloud drives. If moving files from one cloud drive to another is your main concern, MultCloud is one of the best options available right now, at least until a more sophisticated tool comes along. Multi-cloud management might be one of the next big things in cloud storage, although as it stands right now, the pickings are pretty slim.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |