I do not think that Apple is done with file management evolution. They even added a view to finder: "All My Files", which also hides classical file system way of browsing files. ICloud is application/document type based storage, iPad is application based file storage. They either have no human friendly solution yet (measured on Apple standards) or want to do it step-by-step, so users can accommodate to changes gradually. Looks like Apple would like to get rid of classical file system "feel" on the user's side. I think (and strongly hope) that this is just a transient period. The way of sharing documents between apps is limited as well and it forces me to have duplicates. That way of sharing breaks logical document coupling as well (by-project, for example). The document sharing between computer and ipad through iTunes->iPad->Apps->App (in second! list) is just overcomplicated and does not even allow real synchronisation. I just love how it all works together well. I have Apple ecosystem in my home and within couple of my friends. Apple is just unfortunately clumsy or it is up to something. ).ĭrop box is just obvious next step: taking file-system to the cloud. Cross-platformness is the easiest one to discount (since even Dropbox isn't cross-platform to the platforms I really care about, like Audi RNS-E, various fitness tracking devices, people who aren't currently dropbox users. Plenty of third-party apps support Dropbox API.ĭropbox may have three main things going for it (simple initial "put stuff in a folder", cross-platform, and great API), but any ONE of those is sufficient. Some people should hate each other for every Apple Internet service.)īasically no non-Apple first-party apps support iCloud in any meaningful way. iTunes Match is marginally useful, but it was done internally by Apple as a first-party thing (and really, iTunes and all online Apple services are an embarrassment to a company which is so good at design even the online Apple Store is crap compared to their physical retail presence. Why? Because so far, iCloud has been totally useless. Yet, I still use Dropbox, and not iCloud. I have only ever used Dropbox from Apple platforms, too. Lots of people are 100% Apple ecosystem (I use Linux and FreeBSD servers, but all my desktops/phones/laptops/etc. Right conclusion (iCloud is DOA), but wrong reasoning. My experience with DropBox has been closer to the "it just works" experience. ![]() So Apple is still really green when it comes to smoothing out all of the rough edges of this complex engineering challenge. What ended up happening is that I had to manually transfer the info (yes, look at the iPhone contacts, type them into a file, then manually type them back into my new iPhone) and actually in the process of moving to iCloud I accidentally deleted all of my contacts without warning. ![]() I had the hardest time getting my contacts from my old iPhone to iCloud. In other words, their walled garden is so tightly walled it doesn't even play nicely with itself.Īnother example is that they don't have a good user experience around communicating what is going to happen when moving data from one device to another. Apple assumes you only have one Apple ID, which is fine, but they do not offer you a way to merge two Apple accounts. As a result of moving to iCloud, I had to ditch one set of assets. ![]() Sure, they can make it pretty and shiny, but I see them balking on the harder engineering challenges.įor example, because I was one of the doomed MobileMe users, I ended up having two Apple IDs for my Apple assets. I view Apple as still very much a newbie in this space. Like the new owner of the Jaguars said, "I think I can clarify at this point for me a fan is somebody who is a season ticket holder." I don't think Apple cares that this doesn't work on Windows. Your app of choice would grab the file from iCloud seamlessly. It's to solve the short-term problem of "I have a file on Computer A, and I want to transfer it to Computer B." In the end, ideally, this would never happen. ICloud is Apple's attempt for this to happen for all of your data. There's no extra step, the photos just appear. You can view them on your AppleTV, you can flip through them on your iPad, you can download them to iPhoto. The bottom line is that any photo you took on your iPhone appears almost immediately on your other Apple devices. Yes, you can't delete individual files, and yes, it has very few features. iCloud, in general, seems poised so that no matter what device it originated on, you can find your data. Apple's goal with iCloud and Air* is not to compete with Dropbox.
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