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Journal Journal: Fliiby : file library

Fliiby (http://fliiby.com/ ) stands for file library. It's an unique, unified and simple way for file uploading, categorizing, sharing and aggregation. On www.fliiby.com , you'll be able to Search & Browse large archive of user-generated content, including images, audio & video, flash games & cartoons, documents and packed archives, in many commonly used file types and extensions. In short Fliiby is an platform for multiple file uploading, publishing and aggregation, enabling automated file conversion to playable web formats, with built-in options for online file sharing. Fliiby team did tremendous task on development side, with integration and preview for most common internet file types, and made Fliiby open, as this type of file library should be. Best way to experiment with site by yourself.
Data Storage

Journal Journal: Looking for File? Try Fliiby

http://blog.go2web20.net/2008/02/looking-for-file-try-fliiby.html Fliiby owns a large web-library of shared files. At first glance it kinda looks like Youtube, only for all kind of file formats. You can preview and download Images, Audio, Video, Flash, Documents and Packed archives. You can also create your own file library, and upload multi files up to 100 files at once, when file size limit is 100MB per file. Easy describe, categorize and manage your uploaded files, make them private or disable download for audio and videos. (All mp3 are disabled for download by default) As part of Fliiby community network, you can search files and browse through hundreds of file categories, user pages and folders. Since Filiby is Flash-based application, the whole experience is different and unique - It's simply fun to navigate through the files. Being a Flash fan myself, I'm guessing it's not easy to create this kind of platform that will behave as fast and smooth as this one, so beside the fact that I was happy to see that it's built with Flash, I was pretty happy with the results as well. Check out some of the embedding options... http://blog.go2web20.net/2008/02/looking-for-file-try-fliiby.html
Google

Journal Journal: Google going for file sharing 28 Billion $ worth market

When king of hill decides to go for strong industry like file sharing (estimated to be worth over 28B $ by the end of 2012) with the cheapest infrastructure of any portal, they are well-placed to kick some serious butt in online storage. To succeed it is needed to meet market demands and to build high-value product. This is where "GDrive" (code name platypus) comes into the play. GDrive is a service that would let users store on its computers essentially all of the files they might keep on their personal-computer hard drives -- such as word-processing documents, digital music, video clips and images. The service could let users access the files via the Internet from different computers and mobile devices and share them online ... Google is getting closer to unleashing an online storage product, one that has been rumored for over a year and would enter the space now occupied by Amazon's S3, Box.net, SkyDrive, and others. Google faces hurdles on issues such as data privacy, copyright, the economics of adding storage capacity and the technical challenges of offering service without interruption. It is still possible that new developments could lead Google to shift tack or shelve plans for the storage offering in the coming months... read the full story : http://blog.fliiby.com/archives/2007/11/28/google-going-for-file-sharing-28b-worth-market/
Security

Journal Journal: Hackers Use Banner Ads on Major Sites to Hijack Your PC

The worst-case scenario used to be that online ads are pesky, memory-draining distractions. But a new batch of banner ads is much more sinister: They hijack personal computers and bully users until they agree to buy antivirus software. And the ads do their dirty work even if you don't click on them.The malware-spiked ads have been spotted on various legitimate websites, ranging from the British magazine The Economist to baseball's MLB.com to the Canada.com news portal. Hackers are using deceptive practices and tricky Flash programming to get their ads onto legitimate sites by way of DoubleClick's DART program. Web publishers use the DoubleClick-hosted platform to manage advertising inventory. Read the full story : http://blog.fliiby.com/archives/2007/11/19/hackers-use-banner-ads-on-major-sites-to-hijack-your-pc/

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