axxxo
VIP Member
You’d think that such a promotion would be enough, but no. Box.net is also generously, but also perhaps quite thankfully, upgrading the maximum file upload limit to 100MB, four-times that which it used to be at a now seemingly meagre 25MB.
Although that still means you won’t be able to throw HD content on there, you can still host a lot of music if you can be bothered moving it all across, for example, or gargantuan quantities of documents.
What’s more, Box.net now has the capability to stream content from AirPlay on your iOS device to an Apple TV, for example, making it less critical to use the service for movies or TV shows.
There’s no doubting that this could potentially be an enormous boost not just for Box.net in their ongoing competition with services such as Dropbox and their new rival in iCloud, which is probably the instigator for this apparently outrageous lavishing of cloud.
In truth, the service was probably about to be left behind due to iCloud’s integration with all Apple products and Dropbox’s cross-compatibility tied with its lack of limits on file size, so it could be a promotion that while relatively short-lived, could keep it afloat for the foreseeable future, or at least prevent its current user base disbanding overnight.
Get it quick as it may not be free for long
Download it HERE