BOXING MATCH: Box—not to be confused with Dropbox—is announcing its own file-sharing service specifically for higher-ed institutions. Dubbed “Box for Education”—not to be confused with “Dropbox for ...
Eventbrite is a business firmly rooted in the cloud. With a website hosted on Amazon EC2, Google Apps for e-mail, calendaring and document creation, a sales team that uses Salesforce.com, and DocuSign ...
Box and Dropbox have been accumulating vast sums of venture capital money as tech investors look for the next big cloud software play, but Box's IPO filing illustrates how difficult, if not impossible ...
The Box mobile app allows users to securely store, manage and share files, photos and documents using the cloud. The free mobile app provides users with 10 GB of free cloud storage. Users can upgrade ...
It's always important to keep university data safe. Below are recommendations to make your file sharing more secure. IMPORTANT NOTE about Sensitive Data: If the data you are sharing falls into the ...
Box this week said its cloud-based content sharing platform is now one of a handful of cloud applications that is HIPAA and HITECH compliant. The company also said it is willing to sign HIPAA Business ...
You've probably heard the term "sneaker net." Well how about "bicycle net?" That's the primary way that New York Mexican restaurant chain, Dos Toros, used to share files and important information ...
Amazon Cloud gets file sharing and collaboration boost with Box integration Your email has been sent Amazon Web Service users can now license the Box Platform through the AWS Marketplace and leverage ...
In a move that highlights the intense competition of among the new breed of online file-sharing services, Silicon Valley startup Egnyte is offering nine months of free file storage to any paying ...
GUEST OPINION: The need to share large files quickly and securely is more pressing than ever. Whether you're sending high-resolution video files, graphics-heavy presentations, or data-heavy reports, ...
Josh Lowensohn joined CNET in 2006 and now covers Apple. Before that, Josh wrote about everything from new Web start-ups, to remote-controlled robots that watch your house. Prior to joining CNET, Josh ...