|
All images © Bob Atkins
This website is hosted by:
|
Author
|
Topic: On-line Backup (Read 7659 times)
|
rowlandw
Newbie
Posts: 5
|
Good article, Bob on external terabyte hard-drive storage. However, what do you recommend for online backup? Specifically, a robust online archiving service for non-sync'ed backup. I want to off-load my images from my computer to online archiving and know that the online image won't delete when deleted from my computer.
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
|
KeithB
|
I think it will be cost prohibitive for a serious photographer. Barracuda online backup costs $0.50 per GB per month.
10,000 photos at 20 MB each (roughly the size of a 7D RAW file) is 200 GB or $1200 per year. 100,000 photos at 20 MB each would cost $12,000 per year!
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
Bob Atkins
|
As Keith says, on some sites it's cost prohibitive if you have a serious number of images, plus unless you have FiOS internet service and pay for unlimited badndwidth, uploading a large number of images is pretty time consuming. Take a look at http://www.carbonite.com/ they are advertising a flat fee of around $55/yr with "unlimited backup capacity". However they also say " ...if you have 3GB of data on your computer, your initial backup will take about 24 hours. If you have 30GBs of data, your initial backup will take about 10 days...". I have about 200GB backed up, which on carbonite would take about 2 months to upload! Still, if you don't have a lot to upload maybe it would be OK.
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
Johnf
Junior Member
Posts: 29
|
I agree ... good article. I did the same thing. I had a 500 Gb external drive for back up of music files and a 1 TB external drive for bac up of photo files (and my documents which takes only a tiny fraction). This is a great solution for computer crashes and if you want a clean start to rid the computer of any spyware malware or any of those were's you can easily reinstall your OS on a cleanly formatted disk. I've done that about 3 times in 4 years. It works great! But what about fire, flood that kind of thing. So I did look into online backup. I tried carbonite but it does not support external drives. I use Mozy. It was $79 for the year, unlimited storage. I have about 700GB in music files and photo files (5D II Files are big!). Now I have no music or photos on the computers "C" Drive, "L" is music and "K" is photos and I have the whole thing backed up on Mozy. I even tested it by deleting and recovering a photo file and then comparing the data and it is identical. I have Comcast internet, not the really fast one ($150/mo) but not the really slow one either and it took about 3 months to back up! Once the initial back up is complete Mozy works well and in the background. I would highly recommend it.
Rowlandw, For archiving I think TB drives are so inexpensive I would just get another one then back it up on line, no extra cost for the back up the way I am doing it. Tigerdirect.com has 1TB drives for $59 and Vantec enclosures for $34 for the e-sata one or $29 for the USB 2.0 one. You can add a whole TB of archive for less than the cost of an good 8GB CF card.
Have fun
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
KeithB
|
I guess one other problem is that what happens when Carbonite or Mozy goes out of business?
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
Bob Atkins
|
Google offer online storage. Their rates are:
20 GB ($5.00 USD per year) 80 GB ($20.00 USD per year) 200 GB ($50.00 USD per year) 400 GB ($100.00 USD per year) 1 TB ($256.00 USD per year)
I doubt they will be going out of business anytime soon. However, you could buy four 1TB hard drives for the cost of 1 year's 1 TB storage and have faster data transfer. If you're worried about your house buring down, you could run an ethernet line out to a garden shed and put your backup system there (in a waterproof enclosure of course...!
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
KeithB
|
Or use alternate backups and keep one offsite - at your work, maybe. (I have have heard that some photographers actually use safety deposit boxes.)
|
|
|
Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|