- #WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS FULL#
- #WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS PASSWORD#
- #WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS PC#
- #WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS DOWNLOAD#
#WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS FULL#
The picture's pretty clear from the graphs, where we show upstream and downstream transfer rates for a subset of the large video files and high number of small files used to test this month's NAS drives (the connection made using the full set is impractical). Is it practical for them to support even 100Mbits/sec uploads and downloads? (Hint: probably not.) Then there's the other side of the connection the cloud service providers have only so much bandwidth to share out across connections. And let's not forget that many people are stuck on non-fibre connections, bringing speeds down still further. Your upload speeds for copying files may be up to 30Mbits/sec dropping to 7Mbits/sec and much lower.
#WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS DOWNLOAD#
What's worse, these are download figures, and fibre broadband remains an asynchronous technology. The very fastest fibre-to-the-premises broadband packages top out at 300Mbits/sec, but the majority of us on fibre-to-the-cabinet packages are stuck at 100Mbits/sec, 70Mbits/sec or less.
#WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS PC#
With a NAS, you may have a Gigabit Ethernet connection linking your PC and the unit, and even 802.11n Wi-Fi will give you up to 300Mbits/sec of bandwidth, rising up to between 400Mbits/sec and 1,300Mbits/sec if you use 802.11ac. With online services, however, you're still constrained by the performance of the servers and the client-side hardware and software, but even more limited by your internet connection. With a NAS, read and write speeds are mainly affected by the bandwidth of the connection between your PC and the NAS, the size and number of the files, the power of the NAS's CPU and the quantity of RAM and the performance of the drives installed. There's just no getting around it - NAS drives have a definite advantage when it comes to speed. Both approaches have their strengths, but if you’re looking to safeguard your most important data or to share it, which way should you jump? Performance NAS box or Dropbox? My Cloud or OneDrive? Local or Cloud? There’s a fight on between the big online storage services and the hardware manufacturers, with both camps claiming the high ground on convenience, ease-of-use and cost. Sorry for the long list but it was a long troubleshooting link and I did want to be thorough.When it comes to storing and sharing your important data, which approach will best fulfill your business or personal needs? Can this be disabled? I don’t want the drive to do this - I have an app for that if I want it. Data transfer - your article refers to content indexing and thumbnail generation. I just use WD Discovery to map it as Z: Drive so I can upload from my PC. I don’t know what WD Sync is but I don’t think I use it.
![wd my cloud desktop app for faster uploads wd my cloud desktop app for faster uploads](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/5V8ospKkR34/maxresdefault.jpg)
#WD MY CLOUD DESKTOP APP FOR FASTER UPLOADS PASSWORD#
No password protected shares or folders.I did turn it off, rebooted, and tried again but it made no difference I use Panda Dome for AV which has no known issues with My Cloud.I’m only using a single other app on the My Cloud which has a monitoring feature to show traffic (it’s at 0 when I tried my various uploads).
![wd my cloud desktop app for faster uploads wd my cloud desktop app for faster uploads](https://aws1.discourse-cdn.com/wd/original/2X/5/58a807642edc8ff049cd3cde937058283a696936.jpg)
![wd my cloud desktop app for faster uploads wd my cloud desktop app for faster uploads](https://aws1.discourse-cdn.com/wd/original/3X/6/6/665c511b0077a2c8b840108f41e84e719bc9687f.png)
I’ve run through the support link you sent me.