I archive on Blu-Ray DiscsI still collect and rip CDs.... How's that for old?
CD storage is not something most retailers do today
50 GiB Blank BD-R disc prices are reasonable now.
Though I wish they would make 128 GiB Blank BD-R discs cheap.
I archive on Blu-Ray DiscsI still collect and rip CDs.... How's that for old?
CD storage is not something most retailers do today
Of course in the past things were easier.. we had a 80486 with a 420MB HDD and a 420MB (compressed) QiC 80 tapedrive
Yep. I have a storage system that holds 4 hard drives, and it connects to my main computer, which can be accessed via the local WAN. A combined total of 18 TB of storage space. Holds movies, music, important documents, and they're all connected to one another so if one fails, I can quickly transfer data to another drive. I have stored data going all the way back to 1996.I always try to buy albums on CD and if possible from the band itself, that way they'll get the most out of it.
As for backups, other machines, some old, some new and they all have all the data my main machine has.
I also have external harddrives and USB sticks but that's not really a backup but a transportation method..
Of course in the past things were easier.. we had a 80486 with a 420MB HDD and a 420MB (compressed) QiC 80 tapedrive..![]()
yeah but unless everything you were backing up was compressible you weren't going to get to get 420MB on a tape.
And in those days the king of Backups as far as tape was concerned was Backup Exec though now it seems more of a IT curse word.
But QiC (of various sizes and capacities) ,DDS,AIT been there done that don't miss it.
Never played with DLT or LTO
^ I guess I’m decrepit then… 4 boxes of CDs in the garage and counting.
And I just pre-ordered the upcoming Joe Bonamassa album on CD.
Cheers,
-CM-
Edit to add: Dang, meant for @Gingerbread Demon ’s earlier post. Didn’t feel like quoting it.![]()
In case you’re curious, it’s the remains of a QF-16 target drone after being hit during a missile test.
The first company I worked for post-military career made target drones and control systems. FWIW, the U.S. military has been flying drones of various sorts since WW2.
Cheers,
-CM-
Yeah, it's still pretty resource hoggish. It's like Windows in that it will take everything you can give it, and sometimes even that's not enough.Is Chrome still resource hungry?
I like all three of those, but for some reason I always got a shim error every time I tried to install them. Linux Mint didn't give me a peep of trouble, despite being based on Ubuntu, so I don't know why that worked, but it did, and I'm happy with it.I used Ubuntu, Kubuntu but mostly Xubuntu because my test machines back then were ancient.. stumbled accross Mint when it was version 13, so that's quite a while ago, that one had a few little issues, then came 15 and it worked flawlessly, every version after that got better, more stable, less issues so I intend to keep usiing it.
So I switched distros last night. After the latest (15th) crash, my fault entirely, I decided that trying to use Manjaro as my daily driver wasn't the best choice, because I like to experiment, and Linux will let you do whatever you want. Plus, I was having some real driver issues with my printer, and with how Arch distros use the AUR, plus KDE as gorgeous as it is was really unstable. As in, things I wasn't doing and it would still crash, or stop running because something would go belly up. Turns out being on a rolling distro can be a headache if you're not well versed in Linux, and I'm still very much a newbie in that regard. I can work my way around Linux by now, but more complicated issues send me straight to the help forums, and at the end of the day I need something stable, reliable, well-tested, and me friendly.
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