is it possible to get more than 2TB?
What if you need cloud storage larger than the 2TB plan? Does apple offer larger plans?
MacBook Pro 15", macOS 10.14
What if you need cloud storage larger than the 2TB plan? Does apple offer larger plans?
MacBook Pro 15", macOS 10.14
No.
There are several alternatives you may want to consider, in particular these two:
is now part of 'Google One'. It provides 15Gb of free storage, with upgrades ranging from 100GB ($1.99 per month) to 30TB ($299.99 per month) (see their pricing page - scroll to the bottom). They have added an additional step to 200GB ($2.99 per month) but removed the 1TB level, the next being 2TB ($9.99 per month). The maximum is 30TB.
The 'Backup and Sync' application appears only in the menu bar and is designed to run on startup and all the time, however it can be quit if desired and there is no background process. I moved to it with the termination of Copy and it works well and reliably, with good transfer speeds. Like Dropbox it syncs with its own folder, which is placed in the Home Folder, and can then sync to the equivalent folder on other devices, and new version can also sync any nominated folders on your computer. It requires OSX 10.10 Yosemite or higher.
Files can be uploaded via a web page or a third party program such as Cyberduck, and folders holding these files can be excluded from the application so that they don't sync to the computer. Files can be shared to specified people (who don't have to have a Drive) or publicly. Some people have tried to use it as a host for podcast media files but this has proved endlessly problematic - it's not really designed for this and I don't recommend trying.
provides storage and sharing, though not syncing. Its pricing is progressive, depending entirely on how much you store (rather than the large steps up used by most other services), with an additional charge for uploads; costs vary by the regions chosen for storage - typical charges are $0.026 per GB, $0.0055 per 1,000 uploads, with storage rates reducing above 50TB - it's aimed at businesses but it quite suitable for personal use. You can have free access up to 5GB for a year (paying the costs if you go over). You can choose from a number of storage areas in USA, Europe or Asia so you would choose the nearest to get the best speeds. It's cheaper than, for example, Google up to very approximately 400GB but above that, as the price increases proportionally, it becomes more expensive up to 1TB, then, with Google's step to 10TB, becomes cheaper up to about 3TB and more expensive up to 10TB. (10 TB is unlikely to be reached by private users! - Google's maximum is 30TB, Amazon is unlimited.)
There is also 'Glacier' storage which is very much cheaper but where files cannot be retrieved immediately - it may take several hours, so it's suitable for long-term storage (this isn't available on the free version).
Its operation isn't as simple as some others so it's worth reading the documentation carefully. Uploading/downloading can be done using the web-page console, but it's easier to use a third-party program - Cyberduck handles it very well. It is designed to be reliable to professional standards and has multiple redundancy in its storage. Though requiring a little more effort to master than the others it's a very good and reliable storage solution
(I have no connection with these firms other than as a customer.)
is it possible to get more than 2TB?