tibor99 wrote:Amazon storage can cost as little as $0.99/TB per month.
dap-addict wrote:Just bought two external hard disks at 2TB again.
Didnt download for a good while and relay entirely on streaming, but for security reasons I shall now start downloading my best scenes again.
Buying small hard disks I hope I can reduce the risk; if I loose 500 downloaded scenes its only so many lost and not my whole library of over 5000.
jackthetreacleeater wrote:I got my first desktop PC in '96, and ever since then I've built my own systems. My memory is somewhat hazy, but I don't think I've ever had a mechanical hard-drive fail on me. I've been through a hell of a lot of hard-drives in my time, but only through wanting to upgrade in capacity. The only mechanical hard-drives I've had "fail" on me are the Seagate Iron Wolves I got for my NAS. I use inverted commas because they're still working and my NAS is still going, but my NAS reports them as having failed and having SMART errors. I'm skeptical as to whether anything is really wrong with them, and whether it's just the NAS software mis-reporting that something is wrong with them. They are noisy, but then they were noisy from the beginning.
I've got a an external 1 TB Buffalo mechanical drive that is probably over seven years old that is still chugging away. I've got a Western Digital external 1 TB SSD that is several years old with is still going. I have three mechanical drives in my desktop right now ( x2 Western Digital and x1 Toshiba), several years old and still chugging away with no problems. My operating system is on a 500 GB Samsung SSD, which again is a few years old now, but still perfectly fine.
I think when it comes to hard-drives of any type, you're always better of sticking to known brands; even though I've had issues with my Seagate NAS drives. I think this is especially true of SSD's. I can thoroughly recommend Samsung SSD's, EVO and PRO versions are the best.
I got the NAS thinking I could centralise my storage and create a porn-bank, but I never really got to grips with it and made it happen and now I can't afford to replace my drives. I have a four bay NAS and with the use of Captain Hind-sight I definitely would have gone with low-capacity NAS SSD's for the first two bays, and then larger mechanical drives for the other two bays.
Do I have a decent back-up strategy? No, I never have, and probably never will
jackthetreacleeater wrote:I got my first desktop PC in '96, and ever since then I've built my own systems. My memory is somewhat hazy, but I don't think I've ever had a mechanical hard-drive fail on me. I've been through a hell of a lot of hard-drives in my time, but only through wanting to upgrade in capacity. The only mechanical hard-drives I've had "fail" on me are the Seagate Iron Wolves I got for my NAS. I use inverted commas because they're still working and my NAS is still going, but my NAS reports them as having failed and having SMART errors. I'm skeptical as to whether anything is really wrong with them, and whether it's just the NAS software mis-reporting that something is wrong with them. They are noisy, but then they were noisy from the beginning.
I've got a an external 1 TB Buffalo mechanical drive that is probably over seven years old that is still chugging away. I've got a Western Digital external 1 TB SSD that is several years old with is still going. I have three mechanical drives in my desktop right now ( x2 Western Digital and x1 Toshiba), several years old and still chugging away with no problems. My operating system is on a 500 GB Samsung SSD, which again is a few years old now, but still perfectly fine.
I think when it comes to hard-drives of any type, you're always better of sticking to known brands; even though I've had issues with my Seagate NAS drives. I think this is especially true of SSD's. I can thoroughly recommend Samsung SSD's, EVO and PRO versions are the best.
I got the NAS thinking I could centralise my storage and create a porn-bank, but I never really got to grips with it and made it happen and now I can't afford to replace my drives. I have a four bay NAS and with the use of Captain Hind-sight I definitely would have gone with low-capacity NAS SSD's for the first two bays, and then larger mechanical drives for the other two bays.
Do I have a decent back-up strategy? No, I never have, and probably never will
Visionary_sight wrote:Thanks for the recommendations for SSD jackthetreacleeater.
Out of curiosity - I am not too clear what NAS is? And how it is beneficial in data storage?
If you have time can you explain it to me why you have invested in this method? I'm a tad dense lol - therefore - if you can write it in a way that is simple for me to understand - that would be very generous of you too.
paulyshoresituation wrote:Where can i store my porn online in case something happens to my external hard drive? Google drive gives you a small amount of gb so create as many gmail accounts as you can?
jackthetreacleeater wrote:Hi Visionary Sight, sorry for the delayed response, kept meaning too; kept forgetting.
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I like watching this French guy's YouTube videos, he discusses Linux for the most part, but he has a video here talking about the benefits of a NAS... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LBtEJ-iQbeg
If I could start over I'd probably try and use Next Cloud and use that as central nexus. I'd also think more carefully about my initial hard-drive choices.
Hope that helps.
nilis wrote:Great topic. I've mostly backed my stuff up on non-SSD external drives. Before that, it was recordable CDs and DVDs, but then the 1080p era hit....and 4k....so optical storage is not gonna cut it anymore. Unless you see yourself filling tall cabinets with all your stuff...which is unrealistic for most people.
As collecting goes (whether is porn, movies, video games, etc.), it's all a matter of space, time and practicality. Unless you have a whole building for yourself, enough money not to have to work, or no other THINGS to attend to (family, other interests, life stuff in general), I say you will soon enough be asking how much of your collection you can realistically enjoy.
Hence a mid-ground solution for most people: streaming.
(no, you cannot be sure your favourite scenes will not disappear from the internet anytime now. then again, anything (text, photos, posts, emails) can disappear from the internet; you can't store it all)
jackthetreacleeater wrote: Interesting philisophical point about collecting. Humans are like magpies, we tend to not be able to help ourselves from collecting one thing or another; mostly rubbish which has no practical or useful value to our lives. I'm guilty of various collecting, which started with comics and magazines when I was younger. I gave up that and then moved onto porn! Storing your own collection is always going to be an expensive habit, but I would recommend it over relying on third party cloud storage or streaming. But yes, streaming is the happy medium. I like looking upon my mighty piles of VHS and DVD's though!
The problem is all collecting has its consequences, particularly environmental. Our general collecting leads to mountains of consumer crap. People think digital storage doesn't have any consequences, but our obsession with storing all information ever recorded by humans leads to massive server farms pumping out huge amounts of heat and using up vast quantities of energy.
jackthetreacleeater wrote:You mentioned the video size; I'm curious as to what size people are downloading in? Web, VGA, HD, 1080p, 4K? I was downloading Brazzers videos in 480p and 720p, then started in 1080p eventually; which does take a up a lot of space. I don't currently download my LP scenes, but I guess if I did I would only do it in HD; as 1080p file sizes are massive and 4K even worse.
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