![]() Mounts make the most of a home videoconferencing center.First MacBook Pro with speedy M2 chip now in Apple stores.Today in Apple history: iPhone 4 arrives with glorious Retina display.For All Mankind poses great questions, then refuses to answer them ★★★☆☆. ![]() Here the appeal is a little clearer than with the camera: you can stream your entire cloud library to any device, without having to download or sync any of those files to a new device.” On one tab you can view your photos on another you can listen to the MP3s you have stored on another you can view (but not edit) work documents like Word files and PDFs. “First is Upthere Camera, which saves your photos directly to the cloud… The second product is Upthere Home, which organizes all the documents you have stored with the service so you can browse them. ![]() “Today you can sign up on a waitlist to try Upthere’s first two products, which are now in beta on iOS, Android, and Mac,” Newton reports. ‘There was no one who did what we envisioned,’ Serlet said in an interview with The Verge. “It pays special attention to metadata, enabling faster searches. “The company says it has built a new way of saving, storing, and organizing files, and done it in a way that takes advantage of the cloud,” Newton reports. Upthere, a company he founded in 2011 to do just that, is emerging from stealth today with a big idea: syncing is dead, and in the future we’ll save all our files directly to the cloud.” And while iCloud improved vastly on the failures of MobileMe, Serlet thinks he can do it one better. “Serlet spent eight years at Steve Jobs’ NeXT and 14 more at Apple following its acquisition, and in those years Apple made a cautious, then enthusiastic embrace of cloud computing. “The drawbacks of syncing were not lost on Bertrand Serlet, the former senior vice president of software engineering for Apple,” Casey Newton reports for The Verge.
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