"What The F*** Is iCloud?"

It's coming time for Apple users to pay their cloud storage dues. One problem: a lot of them have no idea what that even means.

Over the last couple weeks, I've gotten multiple warnings from Apple that my iCloud storage is nearly full. If not for my line of work, this would have been one of the first times I'd been asked to think about iCloud, Apple's automatic online backup service, since updating to iOS 5. It's also the first time I've been asked to pay for it — I had assumed, perhaps wrongly, that since my first backups didn't exceed the 5GB free storage allotment I would never need to pay.

While the warning emails have been part of iCloud from the beginning, Apple appears to be nudging its users lately:

At the low rate my storage demands are increasing, I'm probably only going to need to upgrade to the $20-a-year option. But still, at launch, iCloud didn't feel like something I would need to pay for. Now, I'm stuck paying a yearly fee to keep syncing my backups over the air. To put it another way, I'm paying at least $20 a year to stop using iTunes.


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