Google on Tuesday launched a long-anticipated "Drive" service that lets
people store, share and collaborate on digital files in the Internet
"cloud."
Google Drive accounts with five gigabytes of storage were
available free at drive.google.com and upgrades to more space on servers
in the California company's data centers were available at rates set by
size and country.
"The model is really designed at the core to
help people live their lives in the cloud," Google vice president for
Chrome and Apps Sundar Pichai said on a conference call with reporters.
"Google Drive is something we see as central to the online experience at Google."
Google
Drive software has been tailored for Windows and Macintosh computers as
well as smartphones or tablets powered by Google-backed Android
software.
A version tailored for Apple mobile gadgets will be released soon, according to Pichai.
"We want to make sure that all our users' data are available where ever they are," Pichai said.
Google
Drive data can be reached from various devices, and deleting it from
one deletes it from all. Scanned letters can be saved. Fax messages can
be sent or received at Drive.