Hi,
Please refer below official Google support link to know to view your uploaded files on google drive
Upload files and folders to Google Drive [ https://support.google.com/drive/answer/2424368?co=GENIE.Platform%3DDesktop&hl=en ]
Cheers
Go to Google, search Google drive sign up with the account which you uploaded your files, your all uploaded files are visible.
It is a simple process, just enter your google drive account and kl on the plus button or add files, select them and upload them
If you have turned on the backup & sync on Google Drive, it will still use your internal storage. The files that you made changes or deleted will automatically reflect on the cloud.
On the other hand, directly uploading the files to Google Drive will not use your internal storage.
The app has the synchronizing feature. So if you want to delete the files from your device after uploading on Google Drive, make sure to upload them through the website and not on the app.
First off, there is no cloud - you’re just using someone else’s computer.
Files on Google Drive and other cloud storage services are stored on hard drives in large data centers. Google even has a Street View walk-through here: Take a walk through a Google data center [ https://www.google.com/about/datacenters/inside/streetview/ ]
A WiFi login page is the page that usually appears when you connect to a WiFi behind a so called “captive portal”. Captive portals have the ability to “listen” for a WiFi connection from a user device and redirect all unauthenticated devices to a login page. The short answer is: open your browser and point it to “login.wifigem.com”.
The long answer.
Redirecting your browser to a login page is something that should occur automatically, as soon as you connect your device to the WiFi network. Sometimes it doesn’t happen, for a number of reasons. The main reason is that you are trying to access a HTTPS website. HTTPS has been introduced to avoid hackers attacks called “man-in-the-middle”, that hijack your connection redirecting your requests to another website. This is exactly what a captive portal does, with the difference that the website you are redirected to is just for processing your login request.
So, captive portals are treated as hackers by web browsers, and trying to redirect a HTTPS connection to the captive portal login page causes a full screen warning on your device. So, there’s no way for a captive portal to redirect a HTTPS connection to the login page, and what happens is that your HTTPS website simply won't open, and what you see is a blank page.
As most websites today use HTTPS, the case of a white page on guest devices is more frequent than you can imagine. We are a captive portal producer, and we know well this problem (read WiFi Login Page Not Showing Up - WifiGem [ https://wifigem.com/wp-loginnotshowing ]), so we created a solution that can be used by anyone.
The solution is allow the captive portal hijack your connection… All you have to do is open a HTTP website that you know will not turn into HTTPS. If you open a HTTP website, the captive portal can redirect it to its login page without any warnings. We have created an HTTP domain, login.wifigem.com [ http://login.wifigem.com ], which, regardless of the protocol used to open it, HTTP or HTTPS, will force an HTTP connection, allowing the captive portal to open the login page. So, when the login page won’t appear, if you just type “login.wifigem.com” in your browser URL, the login page should pop up.
The network you are connecting to has a captive portal. Many hotels/motels use this rather than using a WPA encryption key. Once you have connected to the network, when you try to connect to a web site you are redirected to a captive portal login page asking for password, or a username and password. There is usually a terms of service agreement that you are required to agree to in order use their internet connection.
If you are not redirected, try going to another website. Every time I get one of these my home page in chrome just gives me an error that I’m not connected to the internet, but when I try another page I get the redirect. I usually go to msn .com because it’s short and easy to type.
To send large files (up to 10 GB in size) through Gmail via Google Drive is as easy as uploading the file to your Google Drive account and then sending it as a shared URL. The process is similar, but not exactly the same as sending a regular file attachment in Gmail.
All online file storage services have this option.
By default, all you upload is visible only to you. You have to explicitly share files or folders to make then visible to someone else.
You can use another file sharing website, i use SendBig .Com that allows 30GB of file sharing along with many other features.