maffew
Well-known member
i dont know, but do you want to find out...?
na you're alright thanks
i dont know, but do you want to find out...?
If you are uploading thousands of files to box a word of advice.
I've just been downloading them for a work project and noticed something a bit odd.
Box allows you download a whole folder as a zip. Except I did a check and it can miss some.
So I advice you check what the site says and what is actually in the file.
I know this doesn't help with the video and other files but I thought if you had amazon prime you had unlimited photo storage including RAW. Using this would reduce the amount required for the other stuff.
Maybe I'm wrong but that was my understanding.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=201634590
I've just noticed Amazon are ending their unlimited storage offering for Amazon Drive. My bill for next year has risen from £50 to £240 for 3Tb or storage.
Can anyone recommend another service? Given Google Drive is £80 a month, perhaps £240 is not unreasonable, but the near 500% increase rather grates.
These cloud set ups worry me.
I read this week that one company has said if subscriptions are not paid then all your stuff on their cloud will just disappear.
Supposing something happens in your life that payments can't be made for say 6 months. Seems like you would lose everything they are storing.
Perhaps I am reading all this wrongly??!!
I know this doesn't help with the video and other files but I thought if you had amazon prime you had unlimited photo storage including RAW. Using this would reduce the amount required for the other stuff.
Maybe I'm wrong but that was my understanding.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=201634590
You need to be clear what your requirement is.
Cloud is all about access to data from anywhere in the world [online] using many different devices, often simultaneously [true data sharing].
Backup is all about having a duplicate [or several] so that in the event of [the inevitable] hardware failure or loss - your data is still available,
Cloud does not make a particularly efficient or effective backup approach, although many cloud providers try to convince us otherwise.
That was always going to be the problem with cloud storage. Soon as they think they've got you over a barrel and all your stuff's on there, they were always going to up the charges. And if you're daft enough to trust them with several terabytes of data, you'd be IMHO far better off investing in a serious bit of non-cloud hardware to hold your stuff.
I worked in a database/data manager role for a big company that offers online/cloud storage my preference is to do my own backups using locally attached drives. i guess I was used to calling the shots professionally so just seems natural to do my own.
I have little need to share data but when I do (photographs) it would be via flickr.
I only see cloud storage as one aspect of your backing up strategy. I would never keep anything on a cloud that I don't have backed up with a redundancy backup. If your cloud is merely a backup, then you can chop and change services as you feel like it, doesn't really matter if they cut you off, use another service.
I'm actually using a bit of software called Odrive that links all the cloud providers together. I'm actually able to utilise about 80GB of all the free space each provider gives you, and Odrive manages the syncing from your desktop.
However the latest Bladerunner film, and William Gibson novel for that matter, both suggest a future apocalyptic event might actually the wiping of all data off every device in the entire world - so there is that to think about.
is it > 2gb?
I remember the days when HDD capacity used to double in size every year. Seems like spindle drives have peaked now and the technology has moved on to solid state drives, building them up again from smaller capacities. I guess in a few years time 10Tb SSDs will be cheap as chips.
I'd recommend a Synology NAS. You'll get way more value for money from it, than paying some random to hold onto your stuff. Get a 4 bay NAS and have 4 big ass drives in the right RAID formation and your data is doubled up. Ideally get two different types/brands of drive as if you get 4 identical ones they'll probably all die around the same time.