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Sunday, July 17, 2011

What is iCloud?


What is iCloud?
iCloud (formerly iTools, .Mac and MobileMe) is a cloud computing service from Apple Inc. announced on June 6, 2011 at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). The service allows users to store data such as music files for download to multiple devices such as iPhones, iPods, iPads, and personal computers running Mac OS X or Microsoft Windows on computer servers owned by Apple. It also replaces Apple's MobileMe program,[2][3][4] acting as a data syncing center for email, contacts, calendars, bookmark, notes, to-do lists and other data.

Your content. On all your devices.
Support devices:
iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, Mac, or PC.

iCloud is so much more than a hard drive in the sky. It’s the effortless way to access just about everything on all your devices. iCloud stores your content of your all App devices -so it’s always accessible from your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, Mac, or PC.
It gives you instant access to your photos, apps,music,and more. And it keeps your contacts, email, and calendars up to date across all your devices. No syncing required. No management required. In fact, no anything required. iCloud does it all for you.
iTunes in the Cloud
The iTunes in the Cloud service, which became available in June 2011, lets you download all the music you've purchased from iTunes to all of you iOS mobile devices at no added cost. For music not purchased from iTunes, you can pay a $24.99 annual fee for iTunes Match, a service that replicates the user's music with an iTunes-based version of the same songs.
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