Third Party Cloud Storage
Third party cloud storage, such as Commercial Drop Box or iCloud, are hosted off-site.
These locations should not be used to hold University information.
- Queen¡¯s has no control over the documents stored by third-parties
- There have been some instances reported of third-parties being hacked, and information stolen
- If you have any University data in these non-approved consumer solutions, you should migrate the data to University approved file store platforms such as the Q: Drive, OneDrive for Business, SharePoint or Teams.
Local Storage
Local storage is considered to be anything you store on the hard disk of the workstation you are using. This includes the C: drive, the Desktop, or a temporary folder (e.g. C:\Temp).
This is generally considered the least attractive storage option.
- Local storage is not backed-up.
- If you¡¯re using a student machine, local storage will be wiped when the machine is rebooted.
- Local storage is not accessible from off-site.
Portable Storage
Portable storage is considered to be anything you attach to a workstation. This includes USB sticks, media cards or portable hard disks.
- Storage capacity is dependent on the device purchased
- Portable storage is easy to use and is useful for transferring data from one system to another
- Portable storage is not backed up
- USB sticks especially are prone to failing, and data recovery is not always possible
- Confidential information should not be stored on portable storage, due to the inherent risk of it being easily lost or stolen
QUB Dropoff
is not a data storage option.
QUB Dropoff is a web-based service which faciliates Âé¶¹Íø users to send large files (up to 10Gb) to other Âé¶¹Íø and non-Âé¶¹Íø users. Âé¶¹Íø users are those whose have access to Queen¡¯s Online.
Also external users can avail of this service to send files to Âé¶¹Íø staff or students.
This is a temporary file service. All files are automatically removed after 14 days.
You can find more information at sending large files.
High Performance Computing
The Research Computing team at Âé¶¹Íø University provide a number of centrally managed High Performance Computing (HPC) systems. Researchers can avail of these systems in order to solve compute and data intensive problems. For more information visit .
Outlook
Outlook is not a data storage option. Outlook is primarily an email application but also includes a calendar, task manager and contacts manager.
Outlook is not recommended for data storage because it is unstructured from a data storage viewpoint and only accessible to you.
Outlook is not recommended for data sharing because you are not actually sharing the data but only sending a copy which may quickly become out of date.