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In the future (aside fromt eh flying cars) all of my data storage expansion will be in external drives. Far more convenient than using single bigass drives in a computer that;s waiting around to crash. Solid data backup is just too inexpensive and too easy these days. You can get a 1Tb RAID setup going for under $600 without even really trying to shop or Dean-style amazing deals.
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Perhaps you're talking about network storage arrays, not external drives? (Also 1Tb = 1 terrabit, which is only 128GB... bytes are capital B's ;)) |
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You're going to RAID four drives over USB? :lol: Nothing like getting 10% of the available performance! At *least* use ESATA or something that's not going to contend with each other on the bus, ignoring all the other problems with that plan.
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The best reasonable option for private parties is external storage that matches the capacity of their total internal storage of all their machines plus any archival storage such as CD/DVDs smaller external drives, etc. they use.
This gives them 2 copies of everything, one of which they can grab and run with in case of a fire, etc. If you want to do even better, you can 2X or 3X the external storage and always have one off-site. There are plenty of good manual and automated products/processes to keep everything in sync. I have 2 mirrored 2.2 terabyte servers with internal RAID 5 disks. I keep threatening to move one to my Dad's in Gardnerville and setup the sync accross the Internet, but haven't done it. |
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And NAS may be more complicated for some users than a good old USB solution, and NAS is typically more expensive. And don't forget notebook users who need to have some subset of their data with them at all times. |
Actually I don't see the advantage of RAID 5 over RAID 1+0 (not that there aren't any... 1+0 just seems simpler and has all the redundancy you'd need). Not that that's entirely relevant to the topic... which reminds me, sorry about all the OT in your classifieds thread Juice! :lol:
I'm more concerned with not having data only on a single drive to protect against drive failure. If the place burns down, then I'm just screwed. That's what renters/homeowners insurance is for; I'll have a pretty sweet multi-site data storage setup v 2.0 after I get that fat lump-sum check. :lol: And if users can't figure out how to map a network drive, they probably don't have a pressing need for strong data protection. |
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RAID 5 has a huge advantage over RAID 0+1, you get nearly twice as much space on the array for the same number of disks. Five drives in a RAID 5 gives you the same space as eight drives in RAID 0+1. The *only* reason to ever use a mirroring solution is if you need no loss of performance if a single drive fails. |
FYI, nice simple description of RAID levels: http://www.acnc.com/04_01_00.html
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And my music collection is not "critical" but it is irreplacable in large part without spending a bunch of money, and completely irreplaceable without duplicating the hundreds of hours I've spent ripping CDs, downloading and sorting MP3s, and editing the tags. |
So I've never had anything worth backing up on my computer?
I must be missing something? |
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For backup or data serving that doesn't require super speed (like real-time vid editing), it's hard to beat Infrant's NV+. I'm running one at home and one at work.
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Microsoft Home Server is going to be the new hot setup.
-Nightly backups. -Central storage. -Interface my Mom could figure out. -Every peice of data is stored on at least two physical drives. No RAID to rebuild after a failure. Just get a new drive in there when you can. -Data that is not different between computers is not needlessly duplicated between the backups. -You can buy a hardware/software setup from the major players or just buy the software and dump it on a beige box you have laying around. -more features not listed here. |
Sounds nifty. Cost?
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Product page Reviewers Guide Setup guide |
Good stuff. Looks like it could be ideal for small businesses as well.
Why somebody didn't do a Knoppix of this type I don't know. Imagine a bootable DVD that automatically identifies attached internal and external storage and fires up Samba, Apache and a VPN server... In the event of a HW failure all you do mis move the external drives and DVD and it finds the ID tags on the drives and fires up like nothing happened. Web & local GUI for admin... |
1+0 is different then 0+1
you can Stripe 2 drives, Stripe two more, and mirror those two stripes together. 1 fails and performance suffers versus mirror 2 drives mirror 2 more stripe those 2 mirrors. 1 fails and no performance hit is taken. In my old video game box i just went with 0 as i didn't care if i lost my safe points or had to re-install the games. in a 1+0 or 1+0 depending on which drives die you can lose 2 drives and not lose any data. where as a RAid 5 if you lost 2 of 4 you lost everything. Course with 1+0 or 0+1 you could lose 2 of 4 and lose everything, depending on which drives. Sure you lose more storage space in either 1+0 or 0+1 but you are (slightly) less likely to lose data. What's more important to your usage not losing data, or not losing as much space ? |
im so confused.
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I want one of these:
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30092/75/ Or a new Apple Airport Extreme, sicne now you can hook up an external USB HD and have it function as a NAS :) |
Cool alternative to RAID...
http://www.drobo.com/ Keep adding any size drives or swap out the old small ones. Raid 5 like minimal overhead and similar reliability. Still need 3 drives to be worth while, but teh ability to add larger drives as they get cheap is cool. Looks like it is best to upgrade in pairs, but better than doing a whole array at a time. No, it is not cheap, but data protection ain't free. |
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lol windows lol
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