Drobpox
is holding its first developer conference today dubbed DBX where the company’s
CEO announced that the cloud storage service is now responsible for the files
of 175 million users. They are syncing more than a billion files every day.
Impressive, indeed. Additionally, there are over 100,000 apps that use the
Dropbox API set. More interestingly, It is getting updated with an interesting
Datastore API, which will allow users to backup their application data, which
means that settings, bookmarks, contacts, to-do lists and game scores can get
backed up to the Dropbox cloud.
Here’s what Dropbox co-founders Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowsi explained in
the DBX blogpost (source linked below). Our
Sync and Core APIs already take care of syncing files and folders, but as
people use mobile apps more and more, a lot of their stuff doesn’t really look
like a file at all. With the Datastore API, we’re moving beyond files and
providing a new model for effortlessly storing and syncing app data. When you
use an app built with datastores your data will be up-to-date across all
devices whether you’re online or offline. Imagine a task-tracking app that
works on both your iPhone and the web. We’ll see if developers of
popular apps get excited about this functionality and whether we’ll see it in
action at all soon. People save 1 billion files every day to Dropbox's
online storage service, Chief Executive Drew Houston said today at the Mobile
World Congress show here. In addition, the company's 100 million users tap into
the service with 500 million devices, he said. The statistics shows major
growth for a company founded in 2007 when today's high-end smartphones only
just were emerging. When the company started, Dropbox could synchronize
people's data among PCs, but now of course it helps bridge the gaps to
smartphones, tablets, and presumably other
Internet-connected devices of the future. The company has been gradually
expanding the abilities of its software to make it more of a central hub for
people's data with features such as graphics viewers and automatic photo
uploads from phones. Houston said the lavishly
funded company plans more features. Among
them are better tools to deal with people who use Dropbox for both work and
personal tasks and family plans. His speech was essentially a sales pitch to
the mobile network operators and device manufacturers that dominate the show;
Houston made the case that they should consider partnerships. There's
"untapped opportunity" for carriers that could sign up with Dropbox,
mentioning the family plan possibility as an example. "We can tie a family
together in a way that's broader than just a billing relationship,"
Houston said. He also tried to nudge handset makers into partnerships, touting
Dropbox's Samsung deal as an example. Samsung was initially leery of dumping
its own cloud-based storage plan for a cross-platform service like Dropbox, but
they found a way to stand out. "The way they differentiate is by building
Dropbox onto all these core features on the phone," Houston said. Dropbox
expects its users to link up another 150 million devices to the service in
2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment