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Wuala - a distributed file system

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Google Tech TalksOctober, 30 2007ABSTRACTAfter three years of research and development on a distributed storage system, we are ready to unveil the result: Wuala. Wuala is a new way of storing, sharing, and publishing files on the internet. Unlike traditional online storage systems, Wuala is decentralized and can harness idle resources of participating computers to build a large, secure, and reliable online storage. This enables its users to trade parts of their local storage for online storage and it allows us to provide a better service for free. In the talk, I will explain what Wuala is and how it works, and I will also show a demo. All attendees will also get an invitation code to join the early alpha version.Speaker: Dominik GrolimundI am 26 years old and have studied computer science at ETH Zurich. In 1998, I founded my software company Caleido, and developed the Caleido Address-Book, a professional contact management software, of which over 35'000 licenses have been sold so far in Switzerland, Germany and Austria.In 2003, I did an exchange semester at the TU Delft, the Netherlands, as part of the Unitech exchange program, focusing on business and management. In 2004, a six-month internship followed with Siemens Corporate Research in Princeton, New Jersey in the US, where I worked in the 'Intelligent Vision & Reasoning' department, developing a prod...

Channel: People & Blogs
Uploaded: November 2, 2007 at 9:12 am
Author: googletechtalks

Length: 48:32
Rating: 4.70
Views: 35391

Tags: education  engedu  google  googletechtalks  talk  talks  techtalk  techtalks  

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Video Comments

stalepie35 (September 8, 2008 at 8:50 am)
I wish it didn't use Java.
kchecker (August 27, 2008 at 10:39 am)
bullshit7GB space for me .. when i give in 10gb and stay online for 70% of the time...thats just crapi dont see commercial viability
futureprogress (August 22, 2008 at 11:43 pm)
it uses a bunch of OSS and they plan to open it in pieces...
ThrowDots (August 8, 2008 at 11:13 pm)
wren22coopdies81needafar61neighbori like it !
ThrowDots (August 8, 2008 at 11:10 pm)
or codes:size96camelgrove57hit
Simon871987 (August 6, 2008 at 11:14 am)
snug89crowwall87nameprint20hugwashtub85aprondifferent14swallowredbreast86readgrasshopper9boardleader43leadwindow34tabletmeant35possibleloaf37beetsoon91fiddle
CracKPod1 (August 4, 2008 at 10:51 am)
These are fresh and working invitation codes:lend46eageryard63theirmeow57partyanimal63gowndash27drummrs.90sunflowerdance42wolfmagazine50cow
hyretech (July 26, 2008 at 6:13 pm)
How does this improve on AFS/OpenAFS?If it's not open source, how can you hope to verify that it's secure?
MaxTeel (July 24, 2008 at 4:37 pm)
What do you mean? For me it's very useful.
ermonnezza74 (July 14, 2008 at 12:57 pm)
I'm using this and I don't like the fact that it's commercial/closed source, but it's still free, and I think it's the best thing around for exchanging things with friends. And it works perfect on linux. Can you share specific things with specific people on freenet? Or just backup your stuff only for yourself? Please let me know..


 
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