But then they want the original, not a copy.
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There's an IP war coming that is going to fuck up netflix.
But will it fuck up other streamers too?
Another exfat hardrive failed on me,
fortunately it failed in a way that I couldn't put new data on the hard drive. but I could take take data off the hard drive.
I had to move a lot of shit around to make 3.6 TB of safe harbour for a crapload of awful sitcoms at USB2 speeds.
That 20TB external hard drive is actually two 10TB hard drives, optionally configurable in a RAID-1 (mirror) configuration for redundancy. The worst thing one could do would be to stripe or concatenate the discs - the failure of one disk would effectively lose access to all one's data - although notionally one might at least recover half of it in the concatenated case. I use RAID-5 NAS storage as I'm a cheapskate and tend to read much more data than I write. When I require portability, I use SSD external drives.
The worst thing one could do would be to stripe or concatenate the discs - the failure of one disk would effectively lose access to all one's data
I use RAID-5 NAS storage as I'm a cheapskate and tend to read much more data than I write.
I suspect the drives in my NAS arrays are SMR rather than PMR -- I've never bothered to check as my data storage requirements are write once, read many. They're probably SMR as I'm a cheapskate, as I mentioned.
I still use and buy spinning rust, usually for backup machines that aren't switched on very often.
Usually it should be possible to swap the drive for a SSD, might be needed to tear the machine down though.. some pre-builds are incredibly annoying..![]()
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Don't use RAID for long term storage, RAID wasn't designed for that.Invest in a good NAS, stop messing around with external drives, they're only good to transport data NOT as a backup device, a NAS usually comes with RAID abilities and is actually designed to be a (long term) storage device.
They need to learn to encode in the latest codecs like H.265 or H.266 which brings the file size down to manageable levels.The problem is that media snobs have 70 inch tvs, so they think they need to watch everything at 4k, but they still want to store as many movies as they ever did, even though Indian Jones and the Temple of Doom is now an 90 gb blu ray rip.
They need to learn to encode in the latest codecs like H.265 or H.266 which brings the file size down to manageable levels.
CODECS have gotten more efficient, so it's time to use them to encode properly and bring Media File sizes down.
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