Google Drive vs SugarSync
March 07, 2025 | Author: Michael Stromann
29★
Online file storage and syncing service working as a file system for other Google's services. Allows to sync files between all your computers and mobile devices or collaborate on files with your team and partners. Version control, OCR, powerful online viewer. Provides 5 GB free disk space.
4★
SugarSync makes it easy to backup, share and access your files, anytime, anywhere. With SugarSync you get online cloud storage for all your files — documents, music, photos, and video. When you make a change or add files on any of your PC or Mac computers, SugarSync automatically syncs your files to the cloud, where you can access them from any Internet-connected device — including your smartphone or iPad.
See also:
Top 10 Cloud Storages for business
Top 10 Cloud Storages for business
Google Drive and SugarSync are both, in essence, magical boxes of infinite (but not really infinite) storage floating somewhere in the digital ether. They let you throw files in, pull files out and share them with unsuspecting colleagues who may or may not be interested in yet another spreadsheet. They work on all the usual contraptions—laptops, phones, even tablets, if one is feeling particularly avant-garde. Files are automatically backed up, shared and generally do whatever files do when left unsupervised in cyberspace.
Google Drive, a bright-eyed creation of 2012 from the great labyrinthine entity known as Google, comes with 15GB of free space, which seems vast until you realize that every email attachment from 2007 also counts against it. It integrates seamlessly with Google’s office tools, meaning you can write, edit and share documents while barely lifting a finger, which is precisely what modern productivity demands. However, when syncing non-Google files, it can be a bit sluggish, treating them with the kind of suspicion one reserves for house guests who stay too long.
SugarSync, by contrast, hails from 2009 and operates on a different, slightly more eccentric philosophy. It doesn’t believe in free storage, which is a shame, but it does let you sync absolutely any folder on your computer rather than confining you to a designated digital box. This makes it the preferred choice of power users, control freaks and those with an irrational attachment to their file structures. Unlike Google Drive, it insists on synchronizing entire files rather than just their changed bits, which is either wonderfully thorough or a mild nuisance, depending on one’s patience levels.
See also: Top 10 Cloud Storages
Google Drive, a bright-eyed creation of 2012 from the great labyrinthine entity known as Google, comes with 15GB of free space, which seems vast until you realize that every email attachment from 2007 also counts against it. It integrates seamlessly with Google’s office tools, meaning you can write, edit and share documents while barely lifting a finger, which is precisely what modern productivity demands. However, when syncing non-Google files, it can be a bit sluggish, treating them with the kind of suspicion one reserves for house guests who stay too long.
SugarSync, by contrast, hails from 2009 and operates on a different, slightly more eccentric philosophy. It doesn’t believe in free storage, which is a shame, but it does let you sync absolutely any folder on your computer rather than confining you to a designated digital box. This makes it the preferred choice of power users, control freaks and those with an irrational attachment to their file structures. Unlike Google Drive, it insists on synchronizing entire files rather than just their changed bits, which is either wonderfully thorough or a mild nuisance, depending on one’s patience levels.
See also: Top 10 Cloud Storages