You may love it for its free productivity suite, but Google
Drive is first and foremost a cloud storage service. As the nexus of
Google’s other services, its 15GB of free space can be leveraged to
improve almost any productivity task. Here are a few ways you can
maximize your Drive.
1. Set it as your default document location
If you’re reading this, you’re probably already using Google
Drive as your go-to storage option. You can streamline this process by
making it the default save location for all your documents on your PC.
In Windows, right-click on your Documents folder and select Properties. Click Include a folder, then locate your Google Drive folder. Highlight it, select Set save location, and click Apply. Next time you save a Google or Microsoft file, it will save to Drive.
2. Attach Drive files to Gmail
The ability to insert Google Drive files into your Gmail
messages provides a few significant advantages over uploading files as
attachments from your hard drive. First, it allows you to email larger
files. Gmail caps file attachments from your computer at 25MB. But if
you insert a file direct from Google Drive, you can send a file up to
15GB—and up to 1TB if you have a paid plan.
You can insert Drive files into your Gmail messages as an attachment or a link.
Inserting Drive files also makes collaboration more
efficient. Normally if you send a collaborative document to multiple
people, you’ll be returned a separate version of that document from each
recipient, from which you’ll have to compile feedback into a master
doc. But because Google Drive’s productivity apps—Docs, Sheets, and
Slides—make each collaborator’s comments and changes visible in real
time to everyone that file is shared with, there’s no need to pass
several versions of the same document, spreadsheet, or presentation back
and forth.
Lastly, inserting a Google Drive file gives you greater
control over who sees it. When you attach a local file to an email,
there’s nothing to prevent a recipient from forwarding it on to
unauthorized viewers. But because Drive’s sharing feature lets you
designate who can access a file—and change those sharing settings at any
time—you’ll have more peace of mind when emailing sensitive material.
To insert a file from Google Drive, click the Drive icon at
the bottom of your Gmail message and select the file from your Drive
account. You can insert it as a link to the original file or as an
attachment.
3. Share many files at one time
Emailing attachments is fine when you need to send just one
or two standalone files. But if you need to distribute many files to the
same group of people, it’s better to compile all the files into a
folder and then share it.
When you need to send many files, you can add them to a folder and share it.
To do this, open the folder containing all the files and
click the share icon (it looks like a person with plus sign next to it)
in the upper right. Enter the email addresses for each person you want
to share the folder with and select the type of access for them—for
folders you can give them either viewing or editing privileges. Type any
instructions in the message field and hit send. Each recipient will be
notified that you’ve share a folder with them. Once you’ve shared a
folder, any files you add to it will be shared with the same access
rights.
4. Save web content
One of the perks of data collection apps like Evernote and
Microsoft’s OneNote is the ability to easily capture content from the
web and save it online. You can do much the same in Google Drive with
the help of the Save to Google Drive extension for the Chrome browser.
Install the Save to Google Drive extension to capture web content.
Once you’ve installed the extension, click the Drive icon in
the Chrome toolbar to save the currently viewed webpage. You can save
it as a screenshot (the whole page or just the visible portion), a web
archive, or HTML by configuring the extension options. You can also save
any documents, images, links, or HTML5 audio and video by right
clicking on the object and selecting Save to Google Drive from the drop-down menu.
5. Manage your Drive space
If you find yourself bumping up against Google Drive’s 15GB
storage limit, you can always check which of Google’s services—Drive,
Gmail, and Google Photos—are eating up the most space by hovering over
the usage data in the lower left corner of your Drive page. Clicking on
it will show you the same data in a pie chart.
When you need to audit your storage, Drive lets you know which of Google’s services is consuming the most space.
From there, you can either start pruning files or upgrade to
a paid plan. Currently, Google offers 100GB for $2/month, 1TB for
$10/month, 10TB for $100/month, 20TB for $200/month, and 30TB for
$300/month.
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