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I love these kinds of hacks. I can't remember how exactly it worked, but I remember a program or maybe browser extension from back before Google Drive existed that used Gmail's then-generous email storage space to store files.


Ah yes, gmailfs[1] in 2004 used Linux FUSE (Filesystem in USEerspace) to translate local directories to your (at that time, rapidly and absurdly growing) GMAIL quota.

FUSE let Linux do all kinds of interesting things. Forgot about this one, thanks!

[1] DSLreports discussion from 2004 https://www.dslreports.com/forum/r11192502-GmailFS


I had a project in college (~2007-2008) for this! My project partner and I set up a sharded filesystem using gmail account storage, storing metadata in the title and splitting encoded chunks across emails and accounts. The storage limit per gmail acct was in GB, but the attachment limit per email was ~20mb. We spent quite a few nights figuring out bugs in our algo to stitch together major and minor chunks of string-encoded binaries.

Once the cloud storage companies launched and provided free/cheap tiers for huge storage we mostly lost the need for it.


The gspace extension! - https://www.ghacks.net/2007/03/07/gspace-firefox-extension/

I still have emails that I uploaded with it. Need to sit-down and look how that extension worked




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