Once upon a time, a few kilobytes of data seemed like a mountain of information. How times have changed. E-mail inboxes are stuffed with hundred-megabyte images. Presentations and documents carry so much weight they need to be smushed using special programs.
Never mind the daily need to back up, send, or otherwise keep tabs on important files as you move around. There's a lot of choices, but the bottom line for moving data remains:
Here are some alternatives to consider when choosing a file transfer strategy:
Ride the infobahn
With data costs plunging, there's an increasingly wide playing field of data delivery companies that promise to upload and hold your file for another user to then download.
I recommend: Among the better known point and click services is
YouSendIt,
SendSpace,
MegaUpload,
FileFactory and
Zupload. Most provide maximum files sizes of 250 megabytes up to 500 megabytes and charge only for secure or corporate-branded services.
Consider moving up to business-grade service
If you need secure file transfer or just do a lot of regular, intensive data movement, there are plenty of higher-end corporate offerings that work within your company's network.
I recommend: Among the leaders are
GroupLogic's Mass Transit,
Globalscape and
Accellion.
Is backup or document management your real need?
Sometimes it seems logical to send yourself a file to make sure you have a copy backed up somewhere. Data companies heard that and have moved to create alternatives to e-mailing a copy to your inbox.
I recommend: Among the competitors in the hard-drive-in-the-sky space are
X-Drive,
MyFabrik,
iDrive, and
eSnips.
Use your e-mail service as storage space
If you already have a multi-gigabyte e-mail account, that could be enough for most people's needs, and there's not much new to learn.
I recommend: Yahoo! has long offered its
Briefcase button as away to upload and share documents over the Web. Google seems ready to do something similar, but for now an enterprising programmer has written
a small program which creates a drive icon in either Windows or Mac. Upload to it, and any file is saved in your free Gmail e-mail account. Later, log on and download, as if it were a regular disk drive.
Move your digital life entirely online
The struggle for control of the desktop that was once waged among operating system makers is being rendered pointless by cheap, fast broadband. So much so that companies are pushing to get computer users to compose documents entirely online, where they can be shared or edited by groups.
I recommend: Chief among these has been
Google, which has relaunched its Google Spreadsheet online service to include documents.
Zoho Writer is gaining ground in this market, as is
Flyword.
It's clunkier in some ways, but FTP programs remain common and reliable
FTP means "file transfer protocol," a drab way of saying "send files" using a control panel which shows two drives: The one on your computer, and another somewhere on the Web, usually inside a domain, such as your own dot-com address.
I recommend: The better-known brands in use today include
CoffeeCup,
CuteFTP and
WS_FTP and, for Mac, there's
Fetch. See an extensive list at
Wikipedia.