It would be safe to assume you are aware of the benefits of having storage that you can access from anywhere, using any phone or PC on servers that have multiple levels of redundancy?
I was excited, until I saw that it's monthly. USD$120 for a year's worth of 1TB. Not bad in the grand scheme of things, but considering it's the price of a 1TB drive, I'll take the local drive, and go from there I think.
Quote from Arseynimz: March 14, 2014, 11:00:11 amI was excited, until I saw that it's monthly. USD$120 for a year's worth of 1TB. Not bad in the grand scheme of things, but considering it's the price of a 1TB drive, I'll take the local drive, and go from there I think.Doesn't taking the local disk kind of defeat the purpose of have the reliability and security of a managed cloud storage that won't fail?It's not for dumping your 1tb of porn, it's more as a means of cloud backup.
I have loads of photos on my harddrives, I really need to back them up.IN CASE OF FIRE!
Quote from swindle: March 14, 2014, 11:04:10 amIt would be safe to assume you are aware of the benefits of having storage that you can access from anywhere, using any phone or PC on servers that have multiple levels of redundancy?I assume you know about the benefits of remote access?
What are you playing at son?
I'm just saying you can set up remote access to a physical 1TB drive that you own, which trumps a 1TB drive in the cloud. In my humble opinion.
Disagree, while the storage is easy to setup for access remotely via any non trash router, it doesn't in any way stump the cloud offered solutions in terms of data integrity.If you're happy to leave stuff on there that isn't too important then sure it's great but it in no means replaces what the main benefits of large cloud based storage are, a very good backup method. Although if you have the ability to use both then I would.
Quote from Codex: March 14, 2014, 11:25:50 pmDisagree, while the storage is easy to setup for access remotely via any non trash router, it doesn't in any way stump the cloud offered solutions in terms of data integrity.If you're happy to leave stuff on there that isn't too important then sure it's great but it in no means replaces what the main benefits of large cloud based storage are, a very good backup method. Although if you have the ability to use both then I would.Yes exactly. User can weigh their options, personally I'd take the disk drive and run.
what's this backup thing you guys are talking about... surely you can just re-get everything.I have 75TB of porn, and that would only take a few weeks to gather up.
Basicallyhttp://www.wd.com/en/products/network/networkstorage/Or a NAS, or whatever. Call it whatever.I call it destroyed in a fire, fucked in water and without RAID (most of the time) covering your ass. She ain't no enterprise drive neither.
Quote from swindle: March 15, 2014, 10:25:10 amBasicallyhttp://www.wd.com/en/products/network/networkstorage/Or a NAS, or whatever. Call it whatever.I call it destroyed in a fire, fucked in water and without RAID (most of the time) covering your ass. She ain't no enterprise drive neither.I don't consider setting up a secure remote connection to be difficult so I may be in the minority there. For the average user I would consider the effort required to set up and manage a 1TB cloud drive to be about the same as setting up teamviewer. Because there are so many services too it means you have to workaround some apps. You may weigh that against having to carry a pen drive with teamviewer portable on it, but then I carry one anyway. But then teamviewer isn't really integrated. To be honest the whole app integration thing barely works anyway (in my experience)As for redundancy, I would say your chances of having a catastrophic failure within 1 year are really really low, 10 years fairly high but still not definite. at a rate of $120 a year I think one could reasonably gamble that their drive isn't going to fail in the first year, but then purchase a new disk drive in the second year and run this as redundancy. At this point you might consider carrying on this routine replacing the nth drive with a newer one each year, maybe 2 years? So now you just have to not burn your house down.With my model though you pay 2*n for data (If I want a file then I must upload it from home, then download it somewhere else for every transfer), with your model it would be n+1 (upload it once then download it n number of times). However if like me you have a stupidly huge data cap and VDSL then it may not concern.
Quote from Bounty Hunter: March 15, 2014, 01:40:10 pmAs for redundancy, I would say your chances of having a catastrophic failure within 1 year are really really low, 10 years fairly high but still not definite. at a rate of $120 a year I think one could reasonably gamble that their drive isn't going to fail in the first year, but then purchase a new disk drive in the second year and run this as redundancy. At this point you might consider carrying on this routine replacing the nth drive with a newer one each year, maybe 2 years? So now you just have to not burn your house down.But having a 2 local drives, does not protect against localized issues. i.e. someone steals your pc, fire steals your pc, power surge steals your pc.
As for redundancy, I would say your chances of having a catastrophic failure within 1 year are really really low, 10 years fairly high but still not definite. at a rate of $120 a year I think one could reasonably gamble that their drive isn't going to fail in the first year, but then purchase a new disk drive in the second year and run this as redundancy. At this point you might consider carrying on this routine replacing the nth drive with a newer one each year, maybe 2 years? So now you just have to not burn your house down.
The only bad part is that it's google. But I can look past that at this price.
I hear SkyDrive is a fantastic alternative /s