Commentary
Egnyte's On Demand File Server For The iPhone
What would you say to a single solution that centralized storage, collaboration, and backup in an on-demand infrastructure for $15 per user per month? Oh and it works on the iPhone too. The power of cloud computing realized or more cloud vapor?
What would you say to a single solution that centralized storage, collaboration, and backup in an on-demand infrastructure for $15 per user per month? Oh and it works on the iPhone too. The power of cloud computing realized or more cloud vapor?With the rollout of Egnyte 2.0 with mobile mDrive, Egnyte has extends the cloud computing collaboration platform to the mobile workforce -- or at least those with iPhones. No purchase, download, or installation required.
More SMB Insights
Webcasts
- The Untapped Potential of Mobile Apps for Commercial Customers
- Best Practices in SMB Desktop Virtualization
White Papers
- A smarter approach to CRM: An IBM perspective
- The top 10 secrets to using data mining to succeed at CRM Discover proven strategies and best practices
Reports
- Best Practices: 5 Security Tools Every Small Business Must Have
- SaaS 2011: Adoption Soars, Yet Deployment Concerns Linger
Though it's the iPhone integration that's likely to garner the most attention, the file sharing power of the Egnyte offering is worth a look for small and midsize businesses on cost considerations alone. According to Egnyte CEO Vineet Jain the average SMB user of Egnyte's service licenses 5 seats for a total annual cost of $900 per year. He compares that with basic server costs of $7,000 per year. Even if you cut his estimate in half, it's tempting to forgo a file server and move to the cloud.
The $15 per seat license is for power users only -- they get access to all features. There's no charge for users to access the basic sharing and collaboration features AND there's no charge for additional storage.
And because it's based on familiar interfaces -- if you know My Computer for PCs or Finder for Macs, you'll be right at home -- there's no steep learning curve for user adoption.



Subscribe to RSS
