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Re: OT Data Recovery - backup



For backup Drobo is great.  


Not cheap.  I've had mine for five years now and no (knock on wood, inshallah etc) crash.  The main machines crash, but Drobo keeps on chugging.  Drives have failed in Drobo but the other drives keep the data.  So I just replace the dead one and I'm back off to the races.  

I believe it's sort of a Raid 1 - maybe Raid 1 for dummies. 

I have 12TB in mine.  Around a third is used for redundancy.  Seems stupid till one of the Drobo drives croaks, then it's Hallelujah time.   My model (older) can hold up to 16TB.  Newer ones are faster and hold more. 

Another cool device that requires more hands on attention is the Newer Technology "Voyager".  It's like a little toaster you stick internal drives in.  I take the old crashed drives from Drobo, reformat and use them in the Voyager for backing up very critical stuff.  Cheap and easy.  Not as reliable as Drobo as you have to stick the drives in now and then and keep them exercised. 

Backup technology is still cave man tech, but at least with Drobo your club is, say, iron instead of balsa wood.

Cloud is cool if you don't have multi terabytes of data to upload. Maybe if I go on a two month tour I could upload that while gone.  Relatively slow connect here at the edge of the known universe.

For external audio drives, I use Other World Computing drives.  They are quite rugged, considering.

Always sorry to hear about crashes. 


On Jan 28, 2013, at 11:13 AM, Todd Elliott wrote:

I use 'crashplan' for offsite backups, and can recommend it-- they offer a service where they ship you a hard drive, and you seed your own online backup with it; they have no throttling or storage limit (unlike carbonite). Worth the dough for the peace of mind. 

T


On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 10:29 AM, Sylvain Poitras <sylvain.trombone@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 12:20 PM, Kevin Cheli-Colando <billowhead@gmail.com> wrote:


Seriously though, yes, I will probably think about buying four or five
hard drives at a time at this point.


Depending on the nature of the files, I'd suggest looking into online storage.  Let someone else worry about the redundancy...

There is only one (almost) permanent digital storage solution that I'm aware of and it's not yet commercially available (nor is it very pragmatic for the home user): 


You should assume that everything else will fail.  (Paper still works, though)

I've had some success with a software called DiskWarrior on OS X, but there are so many ways in which a hard drive can fail...  YMMV

Sylvain 



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