Western Digital is clearly trying to give the consumer a better choice: An inexpensive, single-bay NAS with features for a new generation of users who are on the go and who want access to data from a multitude of devices. In the past consumers would forced to make an artificial choice when they were considering external hard drives: Get the largest hard drive that you can afford with minimal features, or pay a premium for a feature rich NAS device that drains your wallet. Western Digital wants consumers to have access to their files from anywhere with minimal fuss. Most of you are familiar with what a NAS device can do but Western Digital is forcing the market to change the way consumers look at external drives. Today we’ll be talking a look at the WD My Cloud 2TB that is sold under part number WDBCTL0020HWT-NESN. You can also pull files that youve stored onto public cloud storage such as Dropbox onto My Cloud. Starting at $141.30 for the 2TB, $170.65 for the 3TB, and $208.00 for the 4TB model, each device will give you plenty of room to stash all of your files wither it be documents, photos, or videos. Western Digital ships the WD My Cloud in three different capacities: 2TB, 3TB, and 4TB.
The WD My Cloud is a personal private cloud at its core and is basically a Network Attached Storage (NAS) device designed to have tons of functionality and extremely an easy to use GUI. Today we take a look at Western Digitals My Cloud Personal Cloud Storage, an external hard drive system that connects to your home network and can be access from the internet via a PC, smartphone, or tablet just like a cloud base service.
Western Digital My Cloud Personal Cloud Storage