Archive for the tag 'Storage'

Fast 4TB Raid for $1500

Penguin October 8th, 2008

fast-4tb-raid-for-1500

LifeZero has a nice rundown on how to setup a fast 4TB RAID system for $1500

Detailed instructions on setting up RAID

The Hardware

  1. $520×8 – 8x fast hard drives (buy)
  2. $550 – The PROAvio EditBox 8ML (buy)
  3. $35×2 – 2x Infiniband cables (buy)
  4. $275 – 1x great PCI-Express RAID card (HighPoint RocketRAID 2322 – buy)

Total: $1420 + SH

The Setup
After you setup all the hardware, and follow the instructions, open a browser and log in to your RAID.

Browse to: https://localhost:7402
Login: RAID (case sensitive)
Password: hpt (case sensitive)

Create an array, then format it to your filesystem of choice. And that’s it!

Now you have a great and super fast external RAID configureable to RAID 0, 1, 5, or 10

+ RAID directions
+ Buy 500GB Western Digital Hard Drive
+ Buy Express Sata II Raid Controller
+ Buy External Mini Sas To Infiniban
+ PROAvio EditBox 8ML

-Penguin

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Dropbox

Penguin September 15th, 2008

dropbox

Dropbox is a free file sharing/syncing application. If you do a lot of commuting on the go, but have a desktop as your main machine, this app is for you.

Dropbox is an app that runs in your system try. It looks at a folder on whatever machine you’re on and if there are changes to the files or the filesystem, it will update all your other machines seamlessly in the background. It’s an amazing piece of software that “just works”.

Another cool thing, is the files are accessible from any machine via the web.

The only down side, is it only offers 2 GB of space. For most people, that won’t be an issue.

Download Dropbox for free.

-Penguin

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Comparison of Optical, Magnetic, and Paper Media

Penguin May 9th, 2008

comparison-of-optical-magnetic-and-paper-media

This past week, I’ve been helping Ninja clean her mess called a room. Earlier in the week, I had been cleaning my own room and in both instances, I came across the same problem: What to do with old media?

The following is a list of media that I encountered:

  • Optical (DVDs, CDs)
  • Magnetic (3.5 inch, 5.25 inch, Zip, VHS)
  • Paper (books, loose, photographs)

The main issue is density. Both in terms of physical space that the object takes up and the amount of data that can be stored on the medium. A secondary issue is obsolescence. The majority of these can no longer be read by modern hardware (floppies, Zip, VHS).

Optical Media
With bittorrent and about 1.5 TB of HDD, I find very little reason to maintain a collection of DVDs or CDs anymore. Of course, I have spindles of both containing various backups of video, images, mp3s, and software. But what to do with purchased optical media? It’s been at least 4 years since I’ve bought or even listened to a music CD. At the same time, I don’t feel like I should just toss it. I already have all but a few of the CDs in mp3.

Magnetic Media
Old magnetic media are garbage. The only ones I hesitated on throwing out were Zip disks and only because there was a possibility that Ninja had some art on it. I also have about 40 games or other pieces of software that come on CD but can’t be run by Windows XP because they were designed for DOS or Win95. Even though the media itself is current, the software has become obsolete. Do I go through the trouble of finding hacks and emulators to run them considering I haven’t touched many of these games in over 8 years?

Paper
The worst is paper. Paper has low physical and data density. 1 8.5×11 sheet can contain a max of 4872 characters (Courier New, 12pt, 0 margin) or 4.9 KB, that’s a data density of 0.05 KB/in^2. Where as a CD can hold 700 MB, resulting in a data density of 45,000 KB/in^2. That’s the equivalent of 900,000 pages.

The main benefit of paper is that it is future proof. No matter what technology comes around, we will always have the necessary bioware to read the media.

Conclusion
So, now what? As much as I would like to throw out my optical media, I can’t bring myself to do it. It takes up relatively little space compared to the other storage mediums. I’ve tossed pretty much all the magnetic media. And most of the paper has gone in the trash as well. Books are a little harder to throw away. Some old manuals have gone in the bin, but many others need to find their way to shelves.

-Penguin

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Drobo: File Storage Solution

Penguin April 4th, 2008

drobo-file-storage-solution


source

Drobo is a “RAID” external storage solution. I put RAID in quotes because it really isn’t. It functions similarly to a RAID 1 setup, but the cool feature is that you don’t need to format the drives or even run identical capacity drives!

Ever since I started working with video, storage and archiving has been a huge concern/fear of mine. Love Angle took up a whopping 88 GB and 20 DVDs.

DVD is still probably the best longer term (5-10 years) solution, I still need an immediate solution for all my HD footage, especially as I work on multiple projects simultaneously.

The Drobo is a bit of an investment at $500 USD, and that’s without any drives. But it’s expandable with 4 bays, hot-swappable, and tells you when drives fail.

-Penguin

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Archiving Solutions Compared

Penguin March 26th, 2008

Little Frong in High Def compares various archival solutions:

LTO3 (Tape)
$0.08/GB
Pros: Cheap, long life-span
Cons: High setup ($2000), sequential read/write

HDD
$0.20/GB
Pros: Fast, no setup costs
Cons: Unreliable

DVD
$0.19/GB
Pros: No setup costs, easily expandable, versatile
Cons: Slow, takes up space, medium life-span (5-10 yrs)

Blu-Ray
$0.90/GB
Pros: High capacity, Can produce HD content, reliable, long life-span (50+ yrs)
Cons: $600 setup for drive, takes up space, slow

As it stands, for pure backup purposes, DVD is probably the most practical. As Blu-Ray comes down in price, and especially if you are doing a lot of HD, it may make sense to move to the new format, especially since HD-DVD is dead, there’s no more uncertainty in the format war.

Prices as of March 2008

-Penguin

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