Soonr is an extremely well done document management service alternative to DropBox, Box.net, SyncDocs and a host of other services in this new Cloud sector of integrated document services. What makes Soonr different is there focus on project management, with resource management for documents, collaborative notes and workgroups. Nicely done. Great iPAD interface. Needs wikiWORD in the worst way. Especially in the wake of Jive's purchase of OfficeSync.
excerpt: Soonr is the first cloud file storage service to offer integrated editing for Microsoft Office documents on the iPad. Unlike cobbling together of file storage apps such as Dropbox and SugarSync with editing apps such as QuickOffice and Documents-To-Go, Soonr brings it all together so you can directly edit any files stored in the cloud using a single app. No configuration, no hassle, no cross-app interdependency. It also works offline when you don't have a Wi-Fi connection and will sync back up when you do. And you can store, share, access, search, edit and sync your files from any tablet securely through Soonr.
I'm not convinced that iCloud will eliminate Windows, MAC and Linux desktops. I've been using DropBox, SyncDocs, Live.com while testing a number of backup-store-synch-share file services. IMHO, it's all about the apps that act on your data. And these can come from the desktop, the Browser, or the device. The best app platform for Cloud hosted data seems to be moving towards HTML5-JS. Not Win32, .NET, C#, Java or Cocoa (iOS). And Google clearly has he best platform of integrated services and API's. They are best positioned to win the Cloud Wars if HTM5-JS and Native Client can close the deal on Cloud apps. IMHO.
excerpt: Apple's announcements yesterday about OS X 10.7 pricing (cheap), upgrading (easy), iOS 5, and iCloud storage, syncing, and media service can all be viewed as increasing ease of use, but from the perspective of Apple CEO Steve Jobs they perform an even more vital function - killing Microsoft.
Here is the money line from Jobs yesterday: "We're going to demote the PC and the Mac to just be a device - just like an iPad, an iPhone or an iPod Touch. We're going to move the hub of your digital life to the cloud."
Just like they used to say at Sun Microsystems, the network is the computer. Or we could go even further and say our data is the computer.
This redefines digital incumbency. The incumbent platform today is Windows because it is in Windows machines that nearly all of our data and our ability to use that data have been trapped. But the Apple announcement changes all that. Suddenly the competition isn't about platforms at all, but about data, with that data being crunched on a variety of platforms through the use of cheap downloaded apps.
Not sure why this is "huge", but it is very cool. Personally i don't care for Box.net. DropBox sync has them beat by a mile. Where Box.net could seriously improve and distinguish themselves from DropBox is with the Project Management component. Needs improvement. Maybe they should hire Conrado? For integration with Google Docs, SyncDocs is still my fav. For sync-share-collaborate with MSOffice, nothing beats wiki-WORD.
excerpt: Box.net made a huge announcement about online collaboration.
Box.net is now almost completely integrated with Google Docs for collaborating with friends or in the workplace.