![]() ![]() “In today’s digital-first world, business outcomes and innovation are increasingly tied to the ability to develop and use innovative technologies and services anywhere, as quickly as possible. The messaging for developers in the Apple space (and I don’t simply mean app developers, but anyone in enterprise IT tasked with Apple support within bigger digital projects) is deafeningly clear: Investment in services such as iDrive, AWS, etc., is becoming a strategic necessity for future growth. ![]() The company last year recruited several leading cloud services software engineers from AWS, Docker, and elsewhere. Of course, this drive to digital means the cloud computing market continues to expand, and Apple remains in the space as it seeks to expand and extend its iCloud/services franchise. In conjunction with off-the-shelf integration options such as Apple Business Essentials, SMBs can now dream of digital presences that may even help them compete with larger incumbents. To my eyes, the lack of more advanced enterprise-focused features you expect from AWS means that iDrive will see the biggest adoption by small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs) and developers seeking to prune the costs of their own internal digital transformation and app deployment/infrastructure projects. (Be warned that some of the more advanced enterprise features you might expect from AWS, such as data replication, aren’t available. Businesses considering iDrive may want to check what features they use in their existing service before switching the migration button.)Īll the same, developers and smaller enterprises should know the company offers the first 10GB of storage for free, charging $0.004/GB/month thereafter. ![]() The service does seem to be of potential interest to developers seeking to support application-related data, while security-conscious users may want to use the service’s data-locking ability to secure critical information. The timing of the lower-cost service seems good enterprises already run 49% of workloads and store 46% of data in the cloud. Mac users and developers can use well-known tools to access this service, including CyberDuck, CommanderOne, or Transmit. Developers can also build applications using standard S3 APIs pointing to IDrive e2 storage. You can use it for off-site disaster recovery, to create an accessible data archive, or for long-term digital archiving. The service comprises an S3 compatible, scalable cloud-object storage platform that lets users store data in the cloud. So now iDriveMonitor launches last at login and isn’t allowed to add itself to my Login Items for more than a few seconds.The latter makes costs far more predictable, particularly for large deployments, though the limited number of data centers (eight, based in the US) may affect speeds in some locations and will almost certainly raise questions around data sovereignty for any non-US business handling critical or personal information. My solution was a really simple AppleScript, which starts it after everything else at login, and when it automatically adds itself to my Login Items, the script counts to 4 and then removes it. There is no option to stop it doing this built into iDrive. I knew I needed iDriveMonitor to start at login, but I didn’t want it to start first because it seems to bog down os x when started along with multiple other apps.īut if I removed it from the login items and manually started it, it automatically added itself back to my Login Items. It took me a while to get to the bottom of the problem after I started delaying application launch to ease memory use on startup. But this isn’t a review of iDrive, it’s instructions for how to use iDrive but stop the iDriveMonitor application from forcing itself to the front of the startup queue when you login. It quietly keeps my selected folders backed up. ![]()
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