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| Hardware / Software Problems, suggestions, tweaking, all things hardware and/or software related. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Forum Moderator
Brigadier General
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I've just taken delivery of two 500gb drives. This means I finally have over 1tb of local storage in my machine.
150gb + 320gb + 500gb + 500gb = 1470gb local. There is actually a legitimate use for all that space. I'm ripping all my DVDs to my PC for uni and at 4.5gb they soon add up. In addition to that photography is surprising hungry on space, a good days shooting can generate 6gb of shots. |
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#2 (permalink) | |
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Major
![]() Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Rexxie's sisters house
Posts: 3,596
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Pfft. Having a Terabit is nothing to talk about.
Jealous much my 650GB is sorely lacking.
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![]() hsimah: Back in his Dads balls Quote:
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#4 (permalink) | |
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Major
![]() Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Rexxie's sisters house
Posts: 3,596
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No, TB is terabyte. Tb is Terabit. I was being pedantic as grim didnt put capitals, like, as a joke.
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![]() hsimah: Back in his Dads balls Quote:
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Sergeant
![]() Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester, England
Posts: 349
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Quote:
![]() Which drives did you buy?
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Forum Moderator
Brigadier General
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Quote:
Isn't a SAN attached to a single machine whereas a NAS is accessible tot he whole network. 55TB is a huge amount for one pc. I've got a 1TB NAS that is used a backup for all the PCs in this house. I bought the Samsung 500GB drives, not because they're the quickest out there (the WD AAKS are currently the best) but because Samsung drives are the quietest out there. As these are for storage I don't need the speed. |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: O-O-O-O-Oklahoma, where the wind comes sweeping down the plain.
Posts: 3,033
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I know, but I spend so much time with it, it feels like mine, plus I have all my music and videos on it.
![]() A SAN is like a NAS on steroids and is accessible to as many machines as you can afford to connect to them. It's like a NAS that appears as a locally-connected drive to whatever machine you "present" it to (and however much you need to present to it). There are a lot of differences and complexities with a SAN. One big difference is that typically on a SAN, you have a separate fiber channel network connecting to the servers rather than over the slower LAN. Super-high speed access, high security by isolating disk access to servers through zoning (think VLANs for disk access), super-high availability and redundancy - but all at a super-high cost. I have around 180 servers connected to four different SANs at various locations. We carve out LUNs that are anywhere from 100GB to around 500-750GB at a time for servers to use. We do use several NAS appliances for 3rd-tier storage though. They are very handy and inexpensive to use and deploy. Personally, I have old 30GB and 80GB SNAP servers at my home that stores all my pictures and file backups.
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