Posted by : Sachin Kumar Sahu May 20, 2013

google doodle
If you don’t see the point of keeping data you have stored across assorted Google services separate then you’re in luck: The company agrees with you. So now your storage will be shared across Google Drive, Gmail, and Google+.












Google on Monday announced a change to how it offers free cloud storage to its users: 15GB will now be shared across Google Drive, Gmail, and Google+. This change will start rolling out over the next couple of weeks.
Previously, Google offered 10GB for Gmail plus another 5GB for Drive and Google+ Photos. Now the company has decided that it makes more sense to unify the free storage across its three services.
As part of the change, Google is tweaking its Drive storage page to show a pie chart that breaks down your storage use across the trio. Here’s how it looks:
screenshots 0000 consumer 730x600 Google now offers 15GB of shared storage for Drive, Gmail, and Google+ Photos, Apps customers get 30GB
As before, you can still upgrade your storage space. Plans range from $4.99 per month for 100GB to $799.99 per month for 16TB.
What is most interesting for Gmail users here is that the 25GB upgrade is no longer the limit. Any additional storage you purchase will also apply to Google’s email service.

Google Apps

The Google Apps story is only slightly different: Google is offering its business customers 30GB of unified storage across Drive and Gmail. Storage will also be shared with photos customers upload to Google+ larger than 2048px, and just as before, files created in Docs, Sheets and Slides don’t count against this storage quota.
Here’s the updated Google Drive storage page for enterprise customers:
enterprise storage image 730x600 Google now offers 15GB of shared storage for Drive, Gmail, and Google+ Photos, Apps customers get 30GB
Google Apps customers are also no longer limited to 25GB for their inboxes. Once again, additional purchased storage can be shared and used by Gmail.
This unification will help Google market how much storage it offers by default, as well as push its storage plans to existing users. It’s not so much a smart move, as a necessary and obvious one.

Source :- www.googledrive.blogspot.com, www.bgr.com & www.thenextweb.com.

{ 5 comments... read them below or Comment }

  1. Outlook.com's unlimited storage is still not beat, though.

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    Replies
    1. Don't forget that anyone before April 2012 has 25GB on SkyDrive. I am on of those few people.

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    2. I wonder what Microsoft will do now in order to keep up.

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    3. I wonder what Microsoft will do now in order to keep up.

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    4. Nothing. They don't need to. Outlook has unlimited storage and 7GB dedicated files. That's pretty good. Many need more than just 1 or 2GBs for email.

      Delete

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