iTwin Wins Popular Science’s Best of What’s New Award in Computing Category

iTwin Wins Popular Science’s Best of What’s New Award in Computing Category

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Boston, MA—iTwin Inc., the company that created iTwin, a USB device that enables users to privately access, edit and share their files and media from anywhere, was honored with Popular Science magazine’s 2011 Best of What’s New Award in the computing category.

“We are honored and thrilled to have been recognized by Popular Science,” said Lux Anantharaman, cofounder and CEO of iTwin. “Winning this award validates a successful launch year for us. Moving into 2012, we are working on improving iTwin in multiple directions—new collaboration-centric features, strengthening iTwin’s inbuilt privacy and security and making it even easier to use.”

iTwin was developed to address the need to access information on the go while providing more security and privacy than cloud-storage, remote access software and traditional USB flash drives. It is a remote file access solution that is plug ’n’ play and also provides two-factor authentication and end-to-end encryption. Comprising two identical parts, iTwin can be used on any Internet-connected computer. When users plug one half of iTwin into a computer and drag ’n’ drop files for remote access, those files can be accessed from any other computer into which the matching half is plugged.

“For 24 years, Popular Science has honored the innovations that surprise and amaze us—those that make a positive impact on our world today and challenge our views of what’s possible in the future,” said Mark Jannot, editor in chief of Popular Science. “The Best of What’s New Award is the magazine’s top honor, and the 100 winners—chosen from among thousands of entrants—represent the highest level of achievement in their fields.”

iTwin’s compact design offers limitless capacity for a one-time fee and secures data via two-factor authentication, military-grade end-to-end encryption and remote disable functionality. iTwin.com

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