Turn your iPhone and iPod touch into a wireless drive and file viewer with DataCase!
Usage instructions and How To videos are available at www.veiosoft.com
Drag and Drop:
DataCase works directly with Finder and Bonjour to make saving files to your iPhone easy. Start DataCase and your Mac already knows that it's there. Drag and drop files just like it was another hard drive.
Mac or PC:
DataCase works with any computer that has wireless capabilities or is connected to a wireless network. Browse, view, upload, and download your files from finder on a Mac using AFP or from windows explorer on a PC. You can even save files to your iPhone or iPod Touch using industry standard FTP. No external applications necessary.
Security:
DataCase allows you to create multiple volumes to separate your data any way you like. Each volume is independent and allows you to define how it can be accessed. You can set read, write, and browse permissions for each, or even make it invisible to anyone but you. Volumes can also be set up to alert you before allowing a connection over the network.
View your files:
No computer available? Why not view your files on your iPhone! DataCase makes it easy to view your Documents. Page up and down, or jump to the top or bottom. DataCase even remembers where you last left off in a document so you don't have to scroll back to where you were to continue reading.
Supported file types include:
- Microsoft Office (doc, docx, xls, xlsx, ppt, pptx)
- PDF
- Text
- Images
- Html
- Audio
- Video
Please note that Audio and Video playback is limited to formats that are supported by the iPhone OS.
Internationalized:
DataCase is localized for English, French, German, and Chinese, with more on the way!
Note: OSX 10.4 users, please check our faq for potential AFP compatibility issues.
Three solid file transfer and storage apps offer different strengths, weaknesses
by Dan Moren, Macworld.com
Storing media like photos, music, and video on your iPhone is a snap: after all that’s what the device was designed for. But when it comes to carrying around other types of documents, or files that aren’t in your iTunes or iPhoto library, the iPhone falls woefully short. You can always send PDFs, Microsoft Word documents, and Excel spreadsheets to yourself, but since the Mail app lacks a search function, finding the one message with the file you want often means picking through long lists of e-mails.
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