ZumoDrive is a newcomer to the cloud storage market, launched in December last year, and unlike Amazon S3, they strive to improve the overall user experience. Why would you want ZumoDrive? ZumoDrive provides you with a hard disk in the cloud, which you can access at any time: from the web, from a computer or from an iPhone.
ZumoDrive is easy to set up, but unfortunately, you can only upload files from Windows or Mac; Linux users will still be able to access the web interface but without any upload capability. The small installation program that helps you create an account and select your desired capacity. The free plan includes 1GB of storage, but you can go up to 500GB with premium accounts.
After you sign up, you’ll have a ZumoDrive icon in the notification area which will allow you to change settings and view the status of uploads.
I wasn’t terribly impressed with the upload speeds, topping at 200KB/s, which means you’ll have to wait a bit if you’re uploading a movie or pictures shot in RAW format. The same holds true if you want to upload your entire music library and use the iTunes integration.
An interesting feature specific to ZumoDrive, is that it caches frequently used files on your local disk – which means you can continue working even if an internet connection is not available. You can control how much space you want it to use by visiting the ZumoDrive Console.
ZumoDrive can also be used as a backup – if the hard drive in your laptop dies, you’ll still have the files if you uploaded them. It’s not very cost efficient though; Mozy’s Unlimited plan is 5$ whereas a 50GB plan for ZumoDrive is 11,99$.
Their iPhone application gives you about the same functionality of the web interface: view photos, listen to songs and read documents(Word, PowerPoint, Excel, .txt, .rtf).
I’ve found ZumoDrive useful in a couple of day-to-day situations, such as showing a colleague the revised presentation even though I forgot my flash drive and working in the lab using schematics saved on the iPhone/iPod touch application.
With Zumodrive, we help people store, access and share the bits of their life – their music, their memories and their ideas. People don’t want to think of where all this is stored and how to take it all with them on their various devices. They just want to know that it is all constantly protected, always accessible and easily shareable. We have leveraged the cloud to make this more of a reality, and we would love to see cool netbooks where ZumoDrive could be added for a few more bucks with a click or two. Would you be willing to pay a few more bucks to always have access to all your personal content? –Zumo Blog
I couldn’t get myself to pay for the premium service; the free option served my limited needs and I’d rather walk with my information stored on an IronKey, safely encrypted, not available to anyone who happened to pick up my iPod touch.
ZumoDrive has one advantage and disadvantage over Wixi: the iPhone application.
On one hand it doesn’t ask you for your password in order to access your files and on the other it provides great convenience over Wixi’s web app. I’m sure Wixi will get around to an iPhone application soon, if they want to stay competitive.
Unfortunately I couldn’t get a hold on the ZumoDrive team via email; I had prepared some interesting questions. I invite them to contact me via email. As always, I look forward to your comments and recommend you to try Zumo Drive and share with us your experiences.
Hey Stefan,
David with ZumoDrive here. Thanks for the review. We didn't get your email request, but feel free to contact me at david at zecter dot com. I'd be happy to answer any questions you have for us.
Hello David,
I don't know what happened to the original message, and Yahoo Mail wants to annoy me today, so here are some questions just off the top of my head:
1. What prompted you to start ZumoDrive?
2. What are the primary goals for your product in terms of user interaction?
3. Could you give us some info on the back end tech/logistics/team of running ZumoDrive?
4. The proportion of free/paid accounts.
5. What effect did Techcrunch have on the service in terms of new accounts and user retention afterwards?
6. Plans you could share for future developments of the service?
7. Who do you think are your primary competitors in this space? What's Zumo's advantage in your opinion?
8. Is the PaaS concept going to affect ZumoDrive or is it already implemented?
If you've got anything else to share, feel free. If this goes well I could include a reference to ZumoDrive and some of the answers in a future article on IBM developerWorks.
Thanks for your time,
Stefan Neagu