News

Google Drive: New Yearly Membership For Power Users

Google Drive: New Yearly Membership For Power Users

Christian Puno

Google Drive, the cloud storage service offers a new yearly membership alternative for its lower tier plans. Currently, subscribers of the 100GB and 1TB arrangements can now prepay for an entire year for $19.99 and $99.99, individually, adequately getting in two months for free.

After the free 15GB choice that each record gets, the 100GB and 1TB arrangements are the most minimal sums offered by Google Drive. Pre-paying yearly for 100GB will spare users 16% ($19.99 versus $23.88) and 17% on the 1TB level ($99.99 versus $119.88). Tap the Upgrade Storage tab in the menu, and select either the 100GB or 1TB yearly value that shows up underneath the button demonstrating the month to month cost to take advantage of the new savings.

 

Without any rebates, the other higher plans that begin at $99.99 every month and go to $299.99 are just accessible in regularly scheduled payments. It's likewise indistinct whether the new membership alternatives are accessible outside the U.S. 

Google Drive as of now offers 15GB to clients for nothing, contrasted with the 2GB Dropbox gives and the 5GB offered to iCloud supporters. When the users access the Google Drive storage page this will allow them to move up to the new annual alternative and initiate charge payment by Google Play.

Google Drive move aligns with Dropbox for 1TB of yearly storage. Microsoft OneDrive offers 50GB of capacity for $1.99 a month, with higher levels just accessible with an Office 365 membership. 

The intensity on the buyer front matches the organization's expanded endeavor cloud desire, with a late rebranding to G Suite and bringing together of different cloud items under Google Cloud. 100GB and 1TB plans will somewhat put additional pressure on Google Drive's Competitors to keep pace and are certain to make upgrading much all the more alluring to power users. 

© Copyright 2020 Mobile & Apps, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

more stories from News

Back
Real Time Analytics