News
Page of 10
Macworld: Glide - Are You Sitting Down?

TransMedia’s Web-based Glide operating system has reached version 4.0, and among the new features of the system is compatibility with Apple's Safari browser.
Read More

CNET: Glide replacing Flash with iPad-friendly HTML5

Glide OS, the cloud-based operating system that runs in your browser, is phasing out Adobe Flash in favor of HTML5. This transition begins with a new version of the company's site that's been designed specifically for Apple iPad owners. Beginning Thursday, visitors to Glide's site will see the Flash version if they're on a normal computer, whereas on the iPad, they'll get the HTML5 flavor.
Read More

Macworld: Glide extends the iPad, converts Flash on the fly

TransMedia, makers of the Glide Web OS that runs in a browser, have brought a new version of Glide to the iPad on Thursday. Rewritten in HTML5, Glide provides access to Web-based document editing and collaboration tools, and it will even convert Flash files on-the-fly for viewing on iPad.
Read More

TransMedia's Glide media sharing and storage service on Thursday began serving iPad users a redesigned interface crafted using HTML5.
Read More

When it launched in late 2005, TransMedia's Glide Effortless was ahead of its time. It offered Web applications and 50MB of free cloud-based storage before users had really been sold on the utility of having their files available on any device. In 2010, thanks both to thrifty innovation and management and to Google's and Microsoft's evangelism of cloud computing, Glide OS -- as the service is now called -- is living up to its name and taking off.
Read More

CNET: Glide OS gets its own GDrive with free 30GB

Web "operating system" Glide on Thursday finally gave a name to its online storage, calling it the "GDrive." It also bumped its capacity from 20GB to 30GB, making it one of the largest free storage offerings on the Web.
Read More

Top Five Technologies of The Decade Includes Glide OS

Michael Miller - Cloud computing, in some ways, is just another example of the pendulum swinging between applications done on client devices and on big servers. But the movement of applications to the Internet has really changed how we look at the task of computing, making new devices possible and making it easier for new applications to launch.
Read More

Examiner.Com: Glide is certainly upping the ante for its main competitor, Google.

TransMedia Corp. released today the next generation of its Glide cloud-based operating system for the Google Chrome browser.
Read More

Internet Evolution: Review: Glide OS 4.0, is basically flawless

It’s cloud computing -- a widely misunderstood term -- made simple and painless...In essence, Glide lets the cloud speak to your browser...Cutting to the chase: The newest release, Glide OS 4.0, launched yesterday (Dec. 7), is basically flawless.
Read More

GigaOM: Glide Seeks to Deliver a Richer OS — Right In Your Browser

Chrome OS forces users to store and work with data exclusively in the cloud. That may very well be too autocratic a model for many people. Glide OS allows you to work with both local and cloud applications, and store data either locally or online.
Read More

Page of 10