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DriveShare FAQ
Windows file sharing is designed to share
files between computers that are on the same network.
DriveShare allows you to access and share files no
matter where you are -- from a coffee shop, a hotel
room, a library or an office -- as long as there an
internet connection available.
DriveShare can operate over any internet
connection available to your computer. It can be wired
or wireless, broadband or narrow-band. DriveShare
can also operate over VPN connections!
If you can browse the web, chances are
you can use DriveShare to access and share files.
Yes. Unlike companies that are light
on the details but tout "proprietary unbreakable
encryption" algorithms and use algorithms designed
in one evening by people with no experience in cryptography,
we not only use standard algorithms, like AES for
encryption and SHA-256 for hashing, that have undergone
heavy scrutiny by some of the smartest security and
encryption experts in the world, but we validate our
implementation and audit the algorithm use to ensure
the safety of your data.
Additionally, for environments that may
require it, we offer FIPS-approved implementations.
DriveShare are firewall-friendly. All
traffic uses TCP and originates or terminates on port
2459. This means that administrators and end-users
can easily configure firewalls and other
security devices.
Additionally, DriveShare can automatically
configure the Windows Firewall that is integrated
in the Windows XP and Windows Vista operating systems.
When not used, DriveShare, run unobtrusively
in the background, without hogging CPU and memory.
The minimum hardware requirements for DriveShare are
the same as those required for Windows XP.
DriveShare utilize compression techniques
to improve the data transfer rate when reading or
writing files, but ultimately those files reside on
remote systems. Generally speaking, users with broadband
connections should not notice any performance issues.
However, when browsing a remote filesystem,
users may notice slight delays as Windows Explorer
changes directories.
This happens because of the number of
operations that Windows Explorer performs in order
to display file icons and image file previews, timestamps
and file metadata. For each of those operations, Windows
Explorer needs to read the file in question. More
files being displayed means more data needs to be
transferred, which can result in a temporary drop
out in performance as your internet connection is
saturated.
DriveShare can run on a number of operating
systems, including Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows
Vista and Windows Server, Linux 2.6 and Apple's OSX.
This means that you can access your files
-- regardless what computer they are on, and where
in the world that computer is -- safely and securely.
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