denverpilot
Tied Down
P.S. note the “534 sold” LOL. Big ol’ servers way more than anybody usually needs at home, stacked on pallets in warehouses.
P.S. note the “534 sold” LOL. Big ol’ servers way more than anybody usually needs at home, stacked on pallets in warehouses.
They usually had multiple GigE ports that were combinable if your switch will do it, and all the hardware is monster tough
...and how much will you pay for the power to run that at home?
...how many weeks will you have to listen to your wife complain about the presence of such a beast in her home?
Stick it out in the garage. LOL.
Actually if you set the fans to quiet mode they’re okay — in a closet. Ha.
But if they reboot the fans to to maximum to test them for about twenty seconds and it just sounds like a Blue Angels sneak pass for a little bit. Ha.
I have 4 blade servers sitting in my garage. Way to loud and hot. Want one?
Here's the problem I have with any array at home (and it's why I'm stoked about boxcryptor). Even if you use mirroring, or raid 6, or whatever, most of the consumer SAN devices are very proprietary even between versions and firmware versions. I've lost a RAID controller once, and lost all my data because I couldn't find one anywhere that would work with my disks.... That was a hard lesson learned. Oh, and the other problem was mentioned above, if your house burns down or is robbed, you're SOL.
If you have lots of money, don't care who sees your data (depending on the solution), don't mind if it just isn't there anymore, or you can't get to it because of legal/ financial random reasons they decide to lock you out, and don't need fast access....
I have a Synology on my home network and highly endorse it. It's a perfect mini server with a good number of apps for file and photo sharing. It's pretty user friendly and takes most of the headache out of maintaining a multi-hard drive (RAID) system. I only use it with two bays, so simple redundancy, and have had two disks fail over the years. Each time, it's been a matter of hearing the alarm tone (or getting an email from the device, very configurable) that a drive has failed, opening the case and swapping out the failed drive with a replacement, and then logging back in and letting it repair the array.I’ll also throw out there if money is no object, get a five drive Synology, set it up to auto backup to S3 or Glacier with a couple of clicks, and replace drives whenever they fail and never worry about it again. LOL.
I’m still too cheap but our monster Synology at work is a total workhorse and does an amazing amount of things one could play with at home that we don’t use at the office. All sorts of things that a Linux admin can set up but would take a few hours is done in a mouse click, and relatively sanely too.
I have a Synology on my home network and highly endorse it. It's a perfect mini server with a good number of apps for file and photo sharing. It's pretty user friendly and takes most of the headache out of maintaining a multi-hard drive (RAID) system. I only use it with two bays, so simple redundancy, and have had two disks fail over the years. Each time, it's been a matter of hearing the alarm tone (or getting an email from the device, very configurable) that a drive has failed, opening the case and swapping out the failed drive with a replacement, and then logging back in and letting it repair the array.
For added safety, I have critical files and folders scheduled for realtime cloud backup, also setup easily with the synology web based admin screen.
Do you use Synology's cloud backup service? I've been thinking of getting one at home and then having it back up some things to the cloud.
I'm using the MS OneDrive integration with the synology app for cloud backup. I found myself with a spare bunch of space with my Office subscription and enjoy the way it's integrated into office apps and is also supported as virtual folders on my locked down corporate work PCs.Do you use Synology's cloud backup service? I've been thinking of getting one at home and then having it back up some things to the cloud.
I also have 2 drives that are 140 gig each, salvaged from old laptops. they must be 25 years old by now.
I remember using a PC-AT with an 8-MHz chip, monochrome screen, and not one but two 5-1/4 disk drives and 1024 baud modem. And considered myself king of the hill back then. Even had to walk uphill in the snow, both ways, barefooted to use it.Not even close... When I bought a laptop 26 years ago, it had an 80 MEGAbyte drive that was "high end" at the time, at least for a laptop. A few months later, a support tech hooked a monstrous 1-GB hard drive to it and I had to take a screen shot because a GIGAbyte was almost unheard of at the time.
Kids! I started with a Westinghouse 2550 mini and a model 33 teletype. After the Wang of course. Then TRS-80 Model 1. Then Compupro 8080 with 2(!) 8” floppies. Then the IBM PC with 256K memory. THEN the IBMI remember using a PC-AT with an 8-MHz chip, monochrome screen, and not one but two 5-1/4 disk drives and 1024 baud modem. And considered myself king of the hill back then. Even had to walk uphill in the snow, both ways, barefooted to use it.
I remember using a PC-AT with an 8-MHz chip, monochrome screen, and not one but two 5-1/4 disk drives and 1024 baud modem. And considered myself king of the hill back then. Even had to walk uphill in the snow, both ways, barefooted to use it.