Apple Launches Beta iCloud Web Site, Reveals Storage Pricing

Registered Apple developers have had access to the iCloud beta since the company’s WWDC in June, but of course they’re bound by Apple's strict NDA and aren't allowed to discuss the cloud service yet. But today, Apple inched a bit closer to the public release of iCloud with the beta release of the iCloud web site, which is very much like the soon-to-be-retired Mobile Me web site, only with fewer options. Now, what's available is web-based access to iCloud Mail (again using a me.com address), Contacts, Calendar, and, for iOS users, Find My Phone and iWork (document storage).

(The iCloud beta web site is still only available to Apple registered developers, unfortunately.)

icloud_website_01_0

It's not much to look at, at least not yet. In fact, it's pretty clearly just Mobile Me 2.0. Which is fine: Despite its poor initial implementation, Mobile Me was always a good idea (i.e. "Exchange for consumers"). Still is.

icloud_website_02_0

But if you're a Windows user, like me, this service will be largely uninteresting, since iCloud, like Mobile Me before it, is much more full-featured if you're a Mac OS X/iOS user. But even for those fully in the Apple camp, the iCloud beta is currently pretty lackluster, and doesn't yet include the service's most eagerly awaited (but optional) feature, iTunes Match.

On a related note, Apple also revealed the cost of additional storage on iCloud. (Users will get 5 GB for free.) There are three added cost storage plans: An additional 10 GB for $20 a year, 20 GB for $40 a year, and 50 GB for $100 a year.

I'll be reviewing iCloud when possible, but again, this won't be as compelling for Windows users as it is for Mac OS X/iOS users.

Discuss this Article 3

dgardfrey
on Aug 2, 2011
It's pretty and easy to navigate. And that's where Hotmail/Live/SkyDrive needs to step up. There are millions of Hotmail users who don't even know that Office Web Apps exist.
ModernDislocation
on Aug 2, 2011
I am a little disappointed that iDisk won't be making it into iCloud. It was one of the MobileMe features I used a bit.
Waethorn
on Aug 2, 2011
So when are they going to change that "find my iPhone" handle? Last time I checked, this also worked with an iPad (and probably an iPod touch too), with OR without 3G (so long as WiFi was turned on). BTW Paul: iTunes Match isn't the same as "iTunes in the cloud". iTunes Match would seem to rely on the iCloud bits, but iTunes+iCloud was announced for more than the US market (later next year...sometime....), whereas iTunes Match was not. Sure, you could access your downloads through iCloud that you've already bought earlier on your regional iTMS store, but matching your media to what iTunes has will involve some additional licensing clout by Apple. The thing about offering it for only $15/yr is likely an exclusive contract that Apple struck with RIAA-member music publishers, and the RIAA doesn't carry much, if any, weight with non-US music companies, so Apple will have to negotiate separate terms with them. Also, some music is published on multiple labels, depending on where in the world you buy it. It's a problem with media that the software world seems to manage better. Media seems to have a lot more legal hoops to jump through to get international publishing, whereas software can be distributed worldwide over the Internet with less requirements, despite the fact that software is given a bad rap for not only copyright issues, but also intellectual property rights issues. You'd think that all of this mandating of the WIPO would be easier for publishers to manage international publishing rights, but in reality it's just another roadblock that limits consumer acquisition rights. My stance has always been that business software SHOULD have intellectual property rights, because it should be considered something where if a developer can help the business make more money, the payment should be considered a royalty. Those IP rights are there to protect the customers investment and it shouldn't be underminded by someone that steals the developers original idea.

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