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How does this compare against existing services? Wondering since we use box for file sharing at our company, and file upload speed has never really been an issue for us.


It depends on which service you compare us to but you could almost think of us as the WeTransfer for large video sharing. We don't have any file size limits, we retain full folder structures and create dynamic zips designed for each target OS, there are no plugins, it's pay-as-you-go so it fits nicely in with project based businesses, custom branding sets us apart from some of the cloud sharing tools, and the interface is intentionally simple to use. We plan to integrate with video specific tools in the near future as well such as Adobe Premier, Final cut pro, etc.. which should make our positioning clearer. When your dealing with sending terabytes of data month small improvements in performance become much more important to your overall business scalability.


That was my first thought as well. There are tons of file sharing services that already exist, but I think their advantage here is allowing people to send files larger than 20GB. Using DropBox, the limit is 20GB or smaller.


At some point, it has to be cheaper and logistically simpler to transfer ownership and not transport the bits. Or the old fallback:

Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway. - Andrew S. Tanenbaum

s/station wagon/"40 foot trailer";s/tapes/disks


Absolutely we don't try to hide that information you can try out our file transfer calculator here https://www.masv.io/file-transfer-calculator/ - This compares MASV to shipping hard drives and uses real rates from the fedex api. The way I like to think of it is it's much more convenient to transfer online instead of shipping hard drives as there is just less to deal with and it's harder to scale. So if MASV is faster or not much longer then shipping a drive or hand delivering then it's time you can spend on taking on more projects.


You got it. In general you can send as much or as little as you need with MASV because it's pay-as-you-go which means you don't have to manage fixed storage and it scales up and down with your work. If you don't use it the next month it costs nothing.


Google Drive allows files up to 5TB https://support.google.com/drive/answer/37603?hl=en but does not give any guarantee you will not breach some magical limits set.

I guess MASV is transparent about file sizes (no limit) and bandwidth is the resource you pay for, so there is transparency on the SLA.


It seems to be targeted at content creators that routinely have to send very large (~1TB) files. If Masv can do this in a fairly sane way, without issues like "whoops, failed at 99%, try again!" then that's quite a good niche to be in.

Especially since there are plenty of post-production companies that host their own 'customer portal' where files can be uploaded/downloaded, which probably has plenty of security issues and so on. This can then be replaced by a branded Masv page, I guess?


Exactly correct.




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