personal cloud

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  • HooToo TripMate Elite: A travel jack-of-all-trades

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    08.28.2014

    Traveling in the mobile age can be an exercise in trying to pack all of your tech gear so that it's easily accessible during the journey. For short trips, you might be able to get away with as little as a charging cable and an external battery pack for your favorite iOS device. For longer journeys, you might need to carry a MacBook Pro, an iPad, an iPhone, a Wi-Fi hotspot, and more in addition to the aforementioned items. Accessory manufacturer HooToo has just the solution, packing a dual USB wall charger, a 6,000 mAh battery pack, and a combo personal cloud/travel router/Wi-Fi hotspot into one package called the TripMate Elite (US$59.99). Specifications: Dimensions: 3.2 x 3.2 x 1.1 inches (82 x 82 x 28 mm) Weight: 7.15 ounces (203 grams) CPU: Ralink RT5350 Wi-Fi: 802.11 b/g/n, 2.4 GHz, up to 150 Mbps WAN port: RJ-45 Ethernet, 100 Mbps Battery capacity: 6,000 mAh Charging time: Through built-in wall plug, 3.5 hours. Through micro-USB, 8 hours Output: 1 x 5V/1A, 1 x 5V/2A Personal cloud capability can address up to 4TB of storage Design: Not too much to say about the design of the TripMate Elite, which is about the same size and shape as one of the old Apple AirPort Express devices. On one corner is a foldable US wall plug for charging. On top is a single power button and LEDs for battery level, Internet connectivity, and wireless status. The back side is covered with ports -- the two 5V USB ports, an Ethernet jack for connecting to a wired network, and a micro-USB connector if you want to charge the TripMate Elite that way. There's also a reset button on the back. All of this is wrapped in shiny black plastic, the kind that picks up fingerprints way too easily. A small gray felt carrying case is included, not only for protecting the device, but it also does a bang-up job of cleaning off those fingerprints. There's also a flat USB to micro-USB cable for charging the battery pack if you choose not to just plug the TripMate Elite into a wall socket, and a small user manual with instructions. Functionality: As a battery pack and charger, there's not much to say -- you plug the TripMate Elite into a wall socket and charge the battery pack, and you can also connect an iPhone and iPad to the device at the same time for charging. The battery pack will give an iPad Air about 1/3 of a full charge, but can charge an iPhone 5s about 2.5 times. The Personal Cloud feature really attracted my attention as a way to back up photos and video from iPhone or iPad to a USB flash drive or to be able to watch movies or browse photos without taking up a ton of space on my iDevices. It's simple: you just plug a flash drive (or really any USB drive) into the outermost USB port, turn on the device by holding down the power button for three seconds, and the TripMate Elite starts broadcasting. To send files from the USB drive to your iPhone or iPad (or vice-versa), you just need to have an app called HooToo TripMate (free) installed on your device and sign onto the Personal Cloud network with a default password. Unfortunately, for looking at photos the app doesn't work too well. It is obviously a bad port from Android or something -- the app doesn't fit the full screen of the iPhone 5 series, and when you look at photos in landscape view, there's no way to tap on the photo and go to full screen. The controls are always in view. When watching videos, it is possible to get the controls to go away, but I found that streaming was so slow that it was better just to transfer the movie file to my iPhone or iPad, then watch it. So much for storing everything on a USB flash drive. The TripMate Elite works well as a travel router. There are three different modes: Access Point (AP) Mode, in which you turn an Ethernet connection into a shared Wi-Fi connection; Router Mode, where you connect the device to an existing DSL or cable modem to act as a wireless router; and Bridge Mode, where you take an existing Wi-Fi connection and re-broadcast it with a different SSID. Setup is quite easy; it's done from any web browser by pointing at a specific IP address, then using a web front end to make the appropriate setting changes. Conclusion For $60, HooToo's TripMate Elite is priced about $40 less than Apple's travel-friendly AirPort Express, although the latter supplies dual-band 802.11n Wi-Fi but doesn't have a battery pack or dual charger built in. While the hardware itself is pretty cool, the HooToo TripMate app leaves a lot to be desired. Use the device as a travel router, battery pack, and charger, and you'll be happy. As for the Personal Cloud capability? Meh. Rating: 2-1/2 stars out of 4 stars possible

  • Engadget giveaway: win an iPad mini and GoPro Hero3+ Black Edition courtesy of younity!

    by 
    Jon Turi
    Jon Turi
    07.29.2014

    Summer has long been the season of vacations, beach outings and BBQs, and that means documenting every possible moment on camera. It helps to have your tunes close at hand, too, in case the party's about to jump off. The task of copying over playlists and organizing photos in the aftermath can be a pain, but younity's personal cloud service could help simplify the task. Instead of syncing and storing data on the cloud, it turns all your devices into dedicated media streamers. That means you have centralized access to all of your files, regardless of which gadget they're on -- they just need to be connected to the internet. Younity also added GoPro integration, letting you discover, catalog and instantly share camera content right from your iPhone or iPad. That's why this week, one lucky Engadget reader will be winning a GoPro Hero3+ Black Edition camera and an iPad mini. All you need to do is head down to the Rafflecopter widget below for up to three chances at winning this adventurous combo courtesy of the folks at younity. Winner: congratulations to Hector R. of Miami, FL!

  • Toshiba launches Canvio Personal Cloud, network-attached storage with iOS and Android apps

    by 
    Dana Wollman
    Dana Wollman
    08.30.2012

    It's been a few years now that Toshiba's been making portable hard drives, so it makes sense that the company would want to venture into larger disks as a next step. Indeed, the company just took the wraps off Canvio Personal Cloud, its first network-attached storage product. The drive itself will be offered in two flavors -- 2TB and 3TB -- but the hook, of course, is that you can use various apps to upload your files and then access them remotely. These applications include desktop software, as well as mobile apps for iOS and Android. In either case, the applications are designed to upload music, video, photos and documents, and all of this content is searchable by date and other filters. The drive will be available sometime next month, starting at $220 for the 2TB version and going up to $250 for 3TB. If you're curious, we've got hands-on photos of the UI past the break.%Gallery-163732%%Gallery-163566%%Gallery-163567%

  • Iomega Personal Cloud devices host your data, not your water vapor

    by 
    Tim Stevens
    Tim Stevens
    01.04.2011

    Finally, a new flavor of Iomega that the EMC fanboys can find palatable. The bigger company consumed the smaller back in 2008 and, while we've seen plenty of products since then, none have really brought the two together like the new Personal Cloud edition of the Home Media Network Hard Drives. In theory, anyway. The idea here is that this is a smart NAS, creating your own little puff and hosting your data for general availability but avoiding the "careless computing" curse by retaining control of your data. It'll naturally play nice with the new Iomega TV and, if you buy two of the things, you can have one perform an automated remote backup to the other. That's the sort of feature that should make a tight-budgeted IT manager's ears perk up. How tight? The first two models of Iomega's Home Media Network Hard Drive Cloud Edition devices launch this month: 1TB for $169.99 and twice that for $229.99. %Gallery-112488%