AOL Buys Storage Firm Xdrive

By Ed Oswald | Published August 4, 2005, 12:47 PM

AOL on Thursday announced that it had acquired Xdrive, a privately held online storage and backup service for an undisclosed amount. Xdrive will operate as a stand-alone company and remain in its Santa Monica, California headquarters. Now a wholly owned subsidiary, it will fall under AOL's Digital Services unit.

"The digitization of consumer home media is skyrocketing, with consumers and AOL members increasingly looking for easier ways to protect and manage a wide variety of important data files and digital media assets," Hunt said. "Xdrive will further enhance AOL’s consumer storage offerings to deliver a more safe and secure digital lifestyle for our members."

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

Great. Now i have to go find another on line storage provider. cause i'm not giving my money to frigging aol.

Score: 0

|

I'm heading to ShadowStorage now that AOL runs Xdrive. ShadowStorage offers 5GB for $9.49/mo so it's in the same ballpark as Xdrive, if not less.

Score: 0

|

Get up n' git git giiit down A O L's a joke in your town.

Get up n' git git giiit down late AOL wears the late crown :)

-Flava Flave (911's a joke)

Score: 0

|

yeah, aol & yahoo have always left a lot to be desired-- but they're improving in the face of competition... will they do enough? who knows...

and i forgot to add-- add some kind of voip to AOL & it'd clinch the deal for me....

Score: 0

|

Score: 0

|

"Get up n' git git giiit down A O L's a joke in your town.

Get up n' git git giiit down late AOL wears the late crown :)

-Flava Flave (911's a joke)"

How old are you? 10? Jesus.

Score: 0

|

Thank you Nate! Unfortunately they're not taking the correct tack:

$40 montly for voip + internet-- that price should include voip + webhosting w/ domain name & forums + xdrive lite, nix the dialup-- & they're still trying to sell the nonsensical aol over broadband....

What i had in mind was them driving traffic to their portal by giving for free or cheap a bunch of extras, where they can then make tons of ad & referral revenue.

To wit, i'd do the following in their shoes-- at their portal & their portal only:

1. free web to regular land line call & fax interface at their portal, also sms... this could be sponsored too: click a link/hear an ad for a free call/message...
2. add SIP voip mode to their AIM...& sms texting....
3. a free xdrive lite flavor accessed thru their portal...
4. continuation of #4: acquire SendthisFile or Yousendit-- a free or lite version of it hard-coded to their site. But even better, acquire Akamai, to fully enable all their offerings.
5. Acquire a major webhost & offer a free site commercial package-- complete with shopping cart, payment acceptance, & dedicated forum...

6. Acquire Pricegrabber and add it to the portal...

7. Acquire, host, or sponsor popular internet forums / communities-- there are so many entities without a home or on some sucky host-- that would jumt at this chance & drive a ton of traffic: from non-profits to schools to businesses..
8. Acquire Ebates...

The sky would then be the limit for them-- revenue & referral income thru some type of adsense program, ad-sponsered pacckages of their various offerings, bonus rewards program for clicks on their site & ads, etc.

Thier corporate brother TimeWarner could then offer some kind of Plus Aol membership as a benefit to subscribers.... AOL could offer free Time Warner Voip to its Aol Members with higher pay packages...

I don't know.........

Score: 0

|

If they can then offer a free variant...ditto for the next logical step: a "decent" hosting plan(unlike past offerings in this area--w/ plenty of space, bandwidth, domain name, spam/spy filtering...)-- combined w/ their presently-improved email...they could then compete with the big boys, and i'd sure as heck give them a real serious lookover...

Score: 0

|

Google Chrome 4: Yes, it's fast, but is it usable?

As Betanews readers have responded to our stories about Chrome's JavaScript superiority...Does that mean we'd actually use this browser? Well...

Video: Netflix on PlayStation 3

Netflix has come to the PlayStation 3 via Blu-ray and BD-Live.

Verizon Wireless launches new Android, Chocolate, and ruggedized phones

The lower-priced Eris joins the Droid, while the Chocolate gets a touchscreen and more music playback.

Early sales figures for Windows 7 nicely high, but do we know why?

Fans of triple-digit surges in figures quoted by Betanews will love this one, as it appears Microsoft rediscovered how to pull off a software launch.

Myka announces its latest Linux-based 'net top box'

Myka's ION brings Boxee, XMBC, and much more to HDTVs.

What hath Mac wrought? A remembrance after a quarter-century

The reason there's a Macintosh today is not because of some brilliant flash of engineering genius, but because Apple had the audacity to learn from its mistakes.

Early build of Moblin 2.1 improves connectivity, but not device support

The Linux Foundation's Atom-centric OS yesterday received a major overhaul with the project release of Moblin 2.1 for netbooks and nettops.

The iPhone's China syndrome: Sales of 5,000 and climbing

There's actually a country where Apple's device is not a godsend, where sales can be measured in the dozens.

New European counterpart to FCC will ensure 'a more neutral net'

Late Thursday night, the ruling telecom administrators of the EU's member nations signed away their final authority to a new entity overseen by the EC.

Sophos study suggests Windows 7 UAC's default setting is self-defeating

Without any anti-virus installed, a Sophos test showed, User Account Control was only capable of thwarting just one malware package out of ten samples chosen.

Indiscreet tweet trips awareness of Web SSL vulnerability

A group of high-level security engineers had been making progress on thwarting a low-level threat to the Web, until somebody blurted it all out on Twitter.