Bump, the flagship
contacts, photos and file sharing application from the company by the
same name, is today getting an upgrade on both iOS and Android in order
to support file-sharing to and from your computer. The ability to “bump”
your phone with your computer was first introduced in May 2012, but at
the time it only supported photos. With the new release, users will be
able to share any file from their phone to computer, and vice versa.
Bump Technologies co-founder and CEO David Lieb describes the added
functionality, saying, “we’ve kind of turned Bump into an unlimited and
ubiquitous USB drive. So you can throw your USB drive away, as long as
you have a phone with Bump on it.”
For
those of us who are earlier adopters of new technology, the USB analogy
may seem a bit “old school” – after all, many of us have long since
moved on to cloud services. But it speaks to the kind of users the
company is targeting with its technologies.
“What we try to do is build products that ‘normal’ people can really
engage with,” Lieb explains. “So yeah, you can do all these things if
you’re set up on some cloud-syncing solution, but what we find is that
normal people don’t really know how to set all that stuff up…we want to
build stuff that has low cognitive overhead,” he adds.
In terms of the new file-sharing capabilities, Lieb predicts some
fairly “normal” use cases, like backing up your phone’s contacts or
saving videos from your phone to your computer, for example. These files
are actually stored on Bump’s servers, though not publicly. Instead,
users are given a URL if they want to share the files or photos with
others. Most don’t do that, though – they simply click the save button
to download the item they transferred to their computer.
Lieb says there’s no plan to turn Bump into a hosting service for
files and photos, but it will continue to work with partners to
integrate options for saving files to the wider web. Currently, Dropbox
is the only one that has been integrated so far, but he says some users
are now asking for Evernote, too.
Expanding upon Bump’s phone-to-web solution goes after another pain
point the company has faced – the need to know other people with the
Bump app installed in order to find a use case for the app. Originally,
Bump offered a way for two people to share data between phones. With
this Bump to computer feature, however, you can take advantage of the
service all on your own.
While today, only around 5 to 10 percent of Bump’s users are
“bumping” with their PC, that traffic is trending upwards, growing by 50
percent over the past couple of months. Bump to date has seen 125
million downloads, but it won’t reveal its current install base or
active users. Lieb would say that a “large number” of those still have
the app installed, and when the company pushes an update, over half of
those users would relaunch Bump to see what’s new.
For what it’s worth, the app is still in good standing on the iOS App
Store, where it’s currently ranked #24 in the “Social Networking”
category. On Android, it’s #19. (source: Distimo).
The updated mobile app is available now for both iOS and Android, from the Bump homepage here.
Original Source :http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/14/with-its-latest-update-bumps-mobile-app-replaces-usb-flash-drives/
With Its Latest Update, Bump’s Mobile App Replaces USB Flash Drives
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