It's almost impossible these days not to create digital "baggage." You start by backing up your PC's data. Then the rest of your devices need more storage space — from backups to storing secondary media libraries, offloading photos, and more. If you're like me, you may have turned to a cloud-based storage service for help.
But with the Western Digital's WD My Cloud, a 2TB external NAS (network-attached storage) device, you can create your own personal cloud in your home, consolidating your data within easy reach — not on some server in San Jose. Because this external hard drive connects via an Ethernet cable to your wireless router rather than the traditional USB to your PC, your ioses and androids devices — in fact, any Wi-Fi-enabled mobiles device — can read and write to the drive.
The WD My Cloud hardware sets up almost instantly. Plug in the AC adapter and snap the Ethernet cable into your wireless router. Done and done. Western Digital has downloadable setup and administrative apps for PCs and Macs and apps for ioses and androids mobiles devices. You can also connect to the drive's onboard management tools by typing in a URL in any browser, much like you would do to access the browser-based dashboard on your router.
After you create a My Cloud password account on the WD web portal, all your mobiles devices using their respective apps could read and write to the drive whenever they're connected to Wi-Fi. An illustrated comic book-style wizard walks you through the no-hassle setup. Worrywarts — or anyone who knows that no cloud service is impervious to security breaches — will find it particularly comforting that all data stays on the drive, not on external servers.
Content can be moved into folders called "Shares" that are either public or private. You can set permission for users for any of the Shares. WD starts you off with some preset Shares, a private folder with your name, and a public folder, a SmartWare folder used for backups, and, for Mac users, there's even a "TimeMachineBackup" folder.
One security gotcha is that all folders by default are set with public permissions. You have to disable Public sharing to cherry-pick which users can access which folders and files.
Since My Cloud behaves like a network server, it's as easy as dragging and dropping files from your PC into the Shares on the drive. Using the mobiles apps you can even move data to and from cloud services such as Dropbox, Box, Google Drive, and SkyDrive as long as you are signed into those accounts.
The drive comes with a USB 3.0 port on the back to which you can add a flash drive or external hard drive. This comes in handy for WD's SafePoint feature, which takes a backup snapshot of the entire My Cloud disk in the event My Cloud bites the dust.
Streaming a video to an ipads and Google Nexus 7 simultaneously took a minute to load, but then played without a hiccup. And moving photos off an iphoness to the My Cloud drive also went without a stutter.
One irritation is the requirement to install Java on your PC in order to use the WD app. And that will likely be followed by red alert warnings from Firefox and/or Chrome that Java has potential security vulnerabilities. The mobiles apps, fortunately, do not need Java.
My Cloud provides enough capacity to bring all your files to one centralized place and gives you a deep storage well for your mobiles devices — without relying on paid external cloud services, which generally cost at least $10 a month depending on your storage level. You only pay about 30 bucks more for My Cloud — so compared to services like Dropbox, Box, et al., it offers instant return on investment. My Cloud also comes in 3TB and 4TB models for those of us who are serious about contributing to the data storage services explosion.
Photo courtesy Western Digital Technologies, Inc.