chand 01:26 PM 01-22-2011
Originally Posted by Blueface:
I don't think that was in the manual under features.:-):-)
What do you mean it not a feature.
:-) I thought that soothing clicking sound it makes when it is on was one of those white noise sleeping devices. Learn something new eveyday.
:-)
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mosesbotbol 04:20 PM 01-22-2011
You could buy a drive that will fit everything once a year and move it off site.
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kgoings 06:19 PM 01-22-2011
Originally Posted by MikeyC:
Currently it's a small amount of data. I just checked and the pictures & videos are only 4GB. My wife likely has more data to store and I'm sure I could find some work files to back up as well. Also, I would anticipate the photo and video amount to sky rocket as my son gets older.
Also, cost and convenience are a factor. I'd like something that I setup once and the backups are done on a regular basis automatically. I don't want to sit at my PC burning disks if I don't have to.
Also, I'd like to say "computer geek" is a term of endearment. :-)
Get a RAID enclosure; you'll have to buy hard drives to fill it. RAID can mirror, stripe, or mirror and stripe your drives so you have redundancy and do not have to worry about losing our data because of a drive failure. If you fill up the drives you buy, you can always upgrade the drives.
Computer Geek is a compliment...
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mosesbotbol 08:10 AM 01-23-2011
Originally Posted by kgoings:
Get a RAID enclosure; you'll have to buy hard drives to fill it. RAID can mirror, stripe, or mirror and stripe your drives so you have redundancy and do not have to worry about losing our data because of a drive failure.
You'll need at least 3 drives for redundancy and can only store as large as the smallest drive.
At the cost of storage prices, an annual SD, Flash, or HD copied and stored away could be cheaper. Inevitablly, you want off site storage if you truly want you data protected. Anyplace you can see out your window is not off site.
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Sauer Grapes 09:30 PM 01-23-2011
I use a RAID NAS, but even then you need to back the RAID up with an external you can store at another location so you have a backup in case of fire or theft. The RAID only protects again a hard drive crash, as there is an exact copy on the other drive and you can just replace the crashed drive and it automatically duplicated the good drive onto the new one again.
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St. Lou Stu 10:08 PM 01-23-2011
Originally Posted by Mugen910:
Calling someone a geek and then asking for their help ...smart....:-)
Well... is he wrong?
:-)
I use a 1TB usb drive that I back up files to. I also store them (pictures) on google's picasaweb.
Zippit Bao.
:-)
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