Apple 
tipped its hat  early, but now we have the details from the man himself. "iCloud stores  your content in the cloud and wirelessly pushes it to all your device.  It automatically uploads it, stores it, and pushes it to all your  devices." And by "automatically," he means it: in addition to every day  content, such as purchased music, iBooks, photos and videos, device  settings, and app data that will be automatically backed up over WiFi,  Documents in the Cloud will effortlessly sync Pages, Numbers, and  Keynote data between all of your iOS devices. There will be no  advertising (contrary to previous rumors), and calendar, mail, and  contact sync is free (for up to five gigs). Also in store is the new  Photo Stream cloud feature, which is essentially a gallery in Photos  that exists on all of your iOS devices, Apple TV, your OS X and even  your Windows PCs, and syncs through the cloud. Take a picture on your  iPhone and it appears on your laptop and your iPad, and it's stored in  the cloud for thirty days. And no, your Photo Stream pics do not count  towards your 5GB total. iCloud will be released concurrent with iOS 5  this fall. 
 If that isn't enough, Apple has announced iTunes Match, a $25 per year  service that scans your iTunes library library and populates your 
iTunes in the Cloud  account with any of your previously bought and ripped music -- in handy  256Kbps AAC, DRM-free files (as long as the titles already appear in  the iTunes store). 
 Last but not least, MobileMe is no more. If you're a current member,  you can still access everything as usual through June 30, 2012  (according to Apple), but there will be no new enrollments. And if your  subscription has auto-renewed recently? Well, we've received plenty of  tips from readers who have received refunds this morning. So at the very  least you have that to look forward too!
 
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