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Microsoft OneDrive boosts file size limit to 10GB

Company is removing the 2GB file-size limitation from both the consumer and business versions of OneDrive.

Mary Jo Foley
Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 30 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She is the author of Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft plans to stay relevant in the post-Gates era (John Wiley & Sons, 2008). She also is the cohost of the "Windows Weekly" podcast on the TWiT network.
Mary Jo Foley
2 min read

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Microsoft

After hints that Microsoft soon planned to remove the 2GB file-size sync limit in OneDrive, the company has made the move official.

Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage services -- both the consumer and business versions -- are moving to support files up to 10GB in size.

From a Wednesday post on the OneDrive blog:

"We're excited to announce that you can now upload files up to 10 GB using the desktop apps for Windows and Mac, all of the mobile apps, and the OneDrive website! We recognized that people not only have more files than they did before, but they have bigger files as well. This is a top feature request we've received and we're excited to deliver it!"

Microsoft execs wouldn't say exactly when OneDrive for Business users will get the new 10GB limit. My guess is their reticence is due to the fact that OneDrive for Business is reliant on SharePoint Online/Office 365, and there is a test version of the next version of SharePoint coming soon. When I asked if that was the case, a spokesperson said the company had nothing more to share.

Microsoft also has increased the number of files that can be downloaded or uploaded at a given time on PCs and Macs, according to the blog post. The underlying parallel syncing technology "netted an approximately threefold increase in syncing speed," Microsoft said.

The improved syncing speed improvements also will be rolling out worldwide "in the coming weeks" for both consumer OneDrive and OneDrive for Business users.

Microsoft also is making it easier for OneDrive users to share links straight from Windows Explorer in Windows 7 and Windows 8. Users will be able to right-click on items they want to share without having to go to the Web first. This feature also will be coming worldwide "within a few weeks," officials said, and will be extended to support Windows 8.1 and Mac in the future as well.

This story posted originally as "It's official: Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage to support up to 10 GB files" on ZDNet.